Making Babies in Early Modern England
Early modern English people were obsessed with making babies. In this fascinating new history, Leah Astbury traces this preoccupation through manuscript letters, diaries, recipe books and almanacs, revealing its centrality to family life. Information was plentiful in guides on the burgeoning fields of domestic conduct and midwifery, as well as in the many satirical ballads focused on sex, marriage and family. Astbury utilises this broad source base to explore all aspects of early modern childbearing, from conception to the months after delivery. She demonstrates that, while religious and cultural ideals dictated that women carry out all of this work, men were engaged in its practice through directing medical decisions. With the entire household including servants, wetnurses and other unexpected actors included in the project, childbearing can be situated within the histories of gender, medicine, social status, family and record-keeping. This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.
- Draws from an extensive body of letters, diaries, recipe books and almanacs from UK and US archives
- Situates childbearing within histories of gender, medicine, social status, family and record keeping
- Introduces new actors into the history of childbirth and medicine including servants alongside nurses and midwives
- This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core
Reviews & endorsements
'Childbearing was never natural, and motherhood was never simple. Leah Astbury takes on the political and social project of 'making babies' and the relationship of motherhood and labour, and patriarchy and family. In so doing she unpicks the broad spectrum of emotion - yearning, grief, joy, anxiety, boredom, frustration, pain and pleasure, love and hatred - which lay behind conception, pregnancy, birth, and the care of children, and reveals the many different practices of men and women which fed into the gendered production of care. A revelatory take on domestic life and an imaginative work of historical engagement.' Hannah Murphy, King's College London
'Early modern English people were obsessed with making babies. In this fascinating new history, Leah Astbury traces this preoccupation through manuscript letters, diaries, recipe books and almanacs, revealing its centrality to family life. Information was plentiful in guides on the burgeoning fields of domestic conduct and midwifery, as well as in the many satirical ballads focused on sex, marriage and family. Astbury utilises this broad source base to explore all aspects of early modern childbearing, from conception to the months after delivery. She demonstrates that, while religious and cultural ideals dictated that women carry out all of this work, men were engaged in its practice through directing medical decisions. With the entire household including servants, wetnurses and other unexpected actors included in the project, childbearing can be situated within the histories of gender, medicine, social status, family and record-keeping. This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.' Leah Astbury, Lecturer in Health History at the University of Bristol
Product details
December 2025Hardback
9781009602860
266 pages
228 × 152 mm
Not yet published - available from December 2025
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Fertility, fruitfulness and anxious families
- 2. Pregnancy, record-keeping and respectability
- 3. Big bellies, imagining babies and cultures of display
- 4. Men, midwives and a place to give birth
- 5. 'Safe' delivery and recovering from birth
- 6. 'Ordering' Infants
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index.