shanmonster (
shanmonster) wrote2011-01-09 01:39 pm
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Medieval Babies?
I figure there are a few historians, SCA folk, and childcare experts here, so I'd post this question in case anyone knows an answer.
What sorts of things were used to take care of babies in medieval times? I'm talking about the equivalent of soothers, baby bottles, onesies, strollers, diaper pins, etc. I'm imagining a lot more swaddling, and carrying babies in slings and such rather than pushing 'em around in baby buggies, especially for peasant families. I figure the rich families could afford fancier equipment.
Can you point me toward any good resources? I've looked around a bit online, but there is a LOT of unrelated chaff to wade through.
Edit: I'm not looking at just medieval Europe, practices/implements in other cultures, too. I'll consider everything from Pygmy to Romanian to Innu.
What sorts of things were used to take care of babies in medieval times? I'm talking about the equivalent of soothers, baby bottles, onesies, strollers, diaper pins, etc. I'm imagining a lot more swaddling, and carrying babies in slings and such rather than pushing 'em around in baby buggies, especially for peasant families. I figure the rich families could afford fancier equipment.
Can you point me toward any good resources? I've looked around a bit online, but there is a LOT of unrelated chaff to wade through.
Edit: I'm not looking at just medieval Europe, practices/implements in other cultures, too. I'll consider everything from Pygmy to Romanian to Innu.
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http://historymedren.about.com/od/medievalchildren/a/child_entry.htm
http://historymedren.about.com/od/medievalchildren/a/child_survival.htm
http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/history/middleages/pdailylife.html
http://www.authorsden.com/visit/viewArticle.asp?id=5658 (More about a woman's life in the Middle Ages than childcare specifically.)
http://www.the-orb.net/bibliographies/children.html (A list of article abstracts detailing a child's life in Middle Ages.)
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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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I am not sure it will have much valuable info but at least it gives you a direction to move towards in terms of research.
Lastly one of my religious studies professors did a book on home birthing in N.America and there were a lot of references in her book to other cultural practices, her book is http://www.amazon.com/Blessed-Events-Religion-Birth-America/dp/0691087989/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1294706332&sr=1-1 so you may want to find this book and look at her references.
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