You are on page 1of 3

Pregnancy and Childbirth in Tudor Times

Marriages were purely business arrangements. A wife could not expect her husband to remain
faithful. Adultery among men was common, especially when their wives were heavily pregnant.
Royal brides, like Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn, enjoyed considerable power and influence
which came solely from their husband. They only enjoyed freedoms he permitted. They were nothing
without him.
A queen's main roles were producing heirs to ensure the dynasty's continuity and setting a high
moral standard as a model of wifely dignity and virtue at court.
Anne Boleyn
Anne Boleyn failed to adjust from dominant mistress to a submissive wife. She lacked the necessary
modesty, circumspection and humility so her critics believed she was guilty of moral laxity.
Alison Weir believes Anne Boleyn was rhesus negative as the real reason for her miscarriages,
especially if Henry VIII and Elizabeth I were rhesus positive. A rhesus negative woman's first
pregnancy results in a healthy child which produces agglutinogen (antibodies) in her blood. The
rhesus-positive blood cells in later foetuses are destroyed by antibodies--resulting in miscarriages or
stillbirths--and probably the cause of Anne's failure to bear another living child. as this was not
identified until the 1940s. [1] (The Anti-D Immunoglobulin injection became available for 20th
Century women to avoid health issues in future pregnancies.)

Catherine of Aragon
Pregnancy was often an annual event which
satisfied the husbands, but not their wives who
were worn out from frequent childbearing.
Catherine of Aragon lost her figure and youthful
bloom within six years, as these pregnancies
and bitter disappointments had considerably
aged her.
Her first pregnancy produced a stillborn
daughter. Catherine's second was a boy, Henry,
born on 1 January 1511 but he died six weeks
later at Richmond on 22 February. Her third
baby was born premature and died. The fourth
was another boy who died within hours of his
birth.
Her fifth pregnancy resulted in a healthy daughter (Mary I) born on 18 February 1516.
The last pregnancy was another daughter who was weak and died before she could be christened.
Henry hinted Catherine suffered from a gynaelogical problem. (He blamed his wives for not
producing sons when he carried the Y-Chromosome.)
A woman who bore ten children choose baby gender could expect to see less than half grow to
adulthood.
Jane Seymour
Many women did not know they were pregnant until the baby quickened (the foetus' initial
movement) or kicked--usually about four months for first-time mothers, or even earlier for second or
subsequent pregnancies. (An ultrasound made it possible for a woman to see the baby's movement
long before she can feel it. Or reveal Mary I's phantom pregnancies--Pseudocyesis--well before she
went into confinement.)
Only midwives attended confinements. Doctors were rarely called except for severe complications.
Most lacked medical knowledge. Jane Seymour had this misfortune to be attended by the best
doctors--experts in medicine (academics) but they had no practical experience in child delivery.
Midwives failed to understand the necessity for hygiene and clean hands.
Puerperal (Childbed) fever was a common hazard for women. It was a serious form of septicaemia
often contracted during or after childbirth, miscarriage or an abortion.
Jane Seymour died from puerperal fever caused by an infection after a long and difficult labour. No
evidence survived of a Caesarean operation performed on Jane or any living mother prior to 1610, as
the woman died immediately.

Women spent the last several weeks of their pregnancy in confinement, away from men, for several
weeks. Strict regulations and correct procedures to be followed for a Queen's confinement.

The chamber was hung with tapestries covering the walls, doors and ceilings. One window remained
uncovered to allow light. Fresh air was considered unnecessary, even dangerous.
Pregnancy and childbirth was hazardous as a high proportion of women and babies died. The
expectant mother arranged for someone to care for her child if she died.
Intensely high rate of infant and child mortality meant no one, especially kings, felt secure with only
one son.
Babies often died from infection without any warning as no antibiotics were available. Many were
given unsuitable foods.
2009 Carolyn M Cash
Sources
Fraser, Antonia, The Six Wives of Henry VIII
Plowden, Alison, Tudor Women: Queens Commoners
Starkey, David, Monarchy: From the Middle Ages To Modernity
Starkey, David, Six Wives The Queens of Henry VIII
Weir, Alison, The Six Wives of Henry VIII
[1] Weir, A, The Six Wives of Henry VIII, Pimlico, London, 1991 (Reprinted 1992), p 304

You might also like