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The Baby Historian

The Baby Historian

Exploring the history of pregnancy, birth, and infancy around the world.

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  • October 12, 2022

    Lamashtu: Hide yo kids, hide yo wife | Baby History

    Lamashtu: Hide yo kids, hide yo wife | Baby History

    Although not a (true) physician, she wraps with bandages,    although not a (true) midwife, she wipes the baby clean.She keeps count of the months of the pregnant woman,    cloistering off the doors of women about to give birth. – Old Babylonian (OB3) Lamashtu Incantation, lines 3–6, From Harvard Library Bulletin Lamashtu was a lion-headed hawk footed…

  • October 10, 2022

    Ancient Greek Potty Chairs | Baby History Shorts

    Ancient Greek Potty Chairs | Baby History Shorts

    In ancient Greece, baby potties doubled as baby chairs, on this wine jug, or chous, from the 5th century bce, the baby is playing with a rattle. At the bottom of a cup a woman interacts with a baby in a potty chair. And on this oil jug, a woman stands next to a baby…

  • September 1, 2022

    August 2022 Rabbit Holes

    August 2022 Rabbit Holes

    Synthetic Embryos For around ten years scientists have been able to get specialised cells to revert to stem cells, which can potentially turn into any kind of cell in an organism. For example, (this is hypothetical) by taking a skin or fat cell and reverting it back to a stem cell, the goal could be…

  • August 19, 2022

    Seinfeld & Circumcision in the 1990s

    Seinfeld & Circumcision in the 1990s

    I have been re-watching the Seinfeld series on Netflix. For the young whippersnappers, it was a primetime sitcom that ran from 1989 – 1998. The show was considered revolutionary for being about “nothing”, just the lives of its four main characters who live in Manhattan: Jerry Seinfeld, George Constanza, Eliane Bennis, and Cosmo Kramer. The…

  • August 5, 2022

    The Great Chicago Baby Mix-Up

    The Great Chicago Baby Mix-Up

    If you give birth at a hospital how well do you trust that the baby you go home with is the baby you gave birth to? Today most hospitals still rely on name tags, though with some high-tech gadgets like security cameras, bar code scanners, foot and fingerprint readers, and of course there’s DNA testing…

  • July 4, 2022

    Rube Goldberg Babies

    Rube Goldberg Babies

    His name is in the dictionary, defined as “ingeniously or unnecessarily complicated in design or construction.” Artist-engineer Rube Goldberg imagined creative but convoluted machines for simple tasks such as preparing toast. Today, videos of successful, or hilariously unsuccessful, Rube Goldberg machines are used for advertisements, “gender” reveals, and music videos. In honour of his 139th…

  • May 29, 2022

    The Cholmondeley Sisters | Art History

    The Cholmondeley Sisters | Art History

    The painting popularly known as The Cholmondeley Sisters resided at the Vale Royal Abbey in Cheshire, from approximately 1615 until it was sold in 1939 as Two Ladies of the Cholmondeley Family to the Howard Family. It was sold again in 1955 to an owner who presented it anonymously to the Tate Gallery in London,…

  • May 24, 2022

    The Formula Shortage

    The Formula Shortage

    The ongoing infant formula shortage is history in the making. Events are still unfolding as I write this but I thought the situation merited more than the Rabbit Hole segment from last week. Edit: I’ve decided to add to this post instead of making new ones as I get more information. Table of Contents Unclean…

  • May 14, 2022

    Suing for Grandkids, Formula Shortage, Wordle Fetus | Rabbit Holes

    Suing for Grandkids, Formula Shortage, Wordle Fetus | Rabbit Holes

    Rabbit Holes are back! But for now, only in written form (videos are hard work y’all). First: what are Rabbit Holes? They are baby-related news or topics that I find tempting to follow down a research rabbit hole but must resist –for the time being– but I think are interesting enough to share. Parents in…

  • May 11, 2022

    The Atacama Mummy

    The Atacama Mummy

    In 2003, in La Noria, a deserted mining town in Chile’s Atacama Desert, Oscar Muñoz found mummified remains in a leather bag, humanoid in appearance but only 15 cm (6 in) tall. It was a mystery. Scientists were confused by the skeleton’s apparent advanced age (developmental maturity) despite its tiny stature. Paranormal proponents believed it…

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