This represents the child in the womb, in its natural situation
1 2018-10-03T19:15:44+00:00 Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia c90233dd07144836ce2dedca73e59366be819522 3 1 J.V. Rymsdyk delin.; R. Strange sculp. plain 2018-10-03T19:15:44+00:00 Original image in: Hunter, William, 1718-1783. Anatomia uteri humani gravidi tabulis illustrata (Birmingham : John Baskerville, 1774). Z 514 (Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia) cppdigitallibrary.org 2014-09-11T13:28:14+00:00 1774 Uterus--anatomy & histology Pregnancy Fetus--anatomy & histology Fetal Development Book Illustrations Rymsdyk, Jan van, active 1750-1788 Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia c90233dd07144836ce2dedca73e59366be819522This page is referenced by:
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What’s Mom Got to Do With It? Maternal Impression in Western Medicine
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Imagine this: you are pregnant and are overcome with a yearning for seafood, mussels in particular. Do you think this desire could be so strong that it could influence the development of your fetus?
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To the contemporary reader, that idea seems ridiculous. Yet, this is exactly a story told in Thomas Fienus’ 1608 book A Treatise on the Power of the Imagination. According to the tale, a pregnant mother’s desire for mussels was so strong that her child was born with a head shaped like a mussel. Fienus then describes the child living for eleven years, fed through its “gaping bivalve,” before finally perishing due to a cracked shell.
Fienus, a prominent Swiss physician at the time, does admit a little skepticism at this account. Yet he spends over 150 pages of his treatise describing with full credulity other such stories of mothers scared by wolves whose children were born with wolf-like features, and of mothers who craved cherries and strawberries and whose children were born with birthmarks resembling these fruits.
These are examples of “maternal impression.” Maternal impression was a theory that an emotional or physical stimulus experienced by a pregnant woman* could influence the development of her fetus. It was used to explain birth defects and other congenital disorders for centuries. Often the impression was a direct analog in which a desire, trauma or even the sight of something could manifest itself on the fetus.
Throughout this path, we will look at some of the ideas behind the concept of maternal impression as they have appeared throughout Western medicine.
*While the Historical Medical Library acknowledges that people who do not identify as a woman can become pregnant and give birth, we will use the term woman and women in our writing on this subject to reflect contemporary usage as it relates to the primary sources consulted.