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Cesarean Section And Religious Hierarchies In Fifteenth- Century Europe, Isobel Mouat
Cesarean Section And Religious Hierarchies In Fifteenth- Century Europe, Isobel Mouat
The Great Lakes Journal of Undergraduate History
Cesarean section in the late fourteenth and early fifteenth century was entangled in a web of legal, political, religious, medical, and ideological tensions. An act of desperation to save the child after the mother died, the procedure was embedded in the popular imagination and imbued with symbolic power. While it was promoted by the Catholic Church to save the souls of the infants through baptism, Jewish communities viewed the procedure with wariness due to its perceived unnaturalness. The coupling of divergent religious views on the procedure, a strained religious environment, and changes in the occupational landscape of obstetrics resulted in …