If you can get your hands on At Home in Renaissance Italy, it's got all sorts of info about childrearing practices in Italy during that period. What I thought was awesome was that there are extant cradles from the period that show that people rocked babies back to front, not side to side--it wasn't till much later that parents caught on to the side-to-side style we use even today. Also, they totally put kids into walkers (those circular things with wheels for older babies/younger toddlers). And they wore helmets of padded cloth in case they fell down while toddling around! For a neat touch, check out portraits of young children during the Renaissance--see how they all seem to wear coral necklaces? Coral was regarded as protective against sickness so you even see it on that portrait of Henry VIII as a toddler. There are a lot of neat things like that.
Iris Origo's Merchant of Prato is from an earlier period, but it's got a lot about parenting as well. It's a long read and not entirely about childrearing, but because it primarily discusses letters between a well-off man and his wife, it deals a lot with parenting concerns--finding wetnurses, education, teaching manners, etc. Similar works that are actually primary sources (or as close as folks can get without learning medieval Italian!) are Ross' Lives of the Early Medici and Gregory's Selected Letters of Alessandra Strozzi. These won't have concentrated sections, but I think combined with the first book would give you a really good understanding of the practices of the period.
Away from Italy, we have Growing Up in Medieval London and Orme's Medieval Children, both about general European history. The latter is, like At Home, lavishly illustrated in color.
If that's not quite what you were looking for, could you elaborate a bit about what you're researching in particular?
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Date: 2011-01-09 10:30 pm (UTC)From:Iris Origo's Merchant of Prato is from an earlier period, but it's got a lot about parenting as well. It's a long read and not entirely about childrearing, but because it primarily discusses letters between a well-off man and his wife, it deals a lot with parenting concerns--finding wetnurses, education, teaching manners, etc. Similar works that are actually primary sources (or as close as folks can get without learning medieval Italian!) are Ross' Lives of the Early Medici and Gregory's Selected Letters of Alessandra Strozzi. These won't have concentrated sections, but I think combined with the first book would give you a really good understanding of the practices of the period.
Away from Italy, we have Growing Up in Medieval London and Orme's Medieval Children, both about general European history. The latter is, like At Home, lavishly illustrated in color.
If that's not quite what you were looking for, could you elaborate a bit about what you're researching in particular?