Professor Helen King (Open University) 19 February 2013 at 18.00hrs.
‘Agnodice’s First Patient: Gendering Childbirth in Antiquity and Early Modern Europe’.
Professor Helen King (Open University) 19 February 2013 at 18.00hrs.
‘Agnodice’s First Patient: Gendering Childbirth in Antiquity and Early Modern Europe’.
John Snow Celebration Event at the University of York
Friday 15th March 2013
I have been advised that today, February 1st, is St Bride’s day – the Celtic patron saint for midwives. The pagan goddess Brigit was associated with fertility, childbirth, and cattle. On her feast day – which is also the Gaelic spring festival of Imbolc – Highland girls made the ‘last sheaf’ of the previous harvest into images of her, which were laid in a decorated cradle called ‘Bride’s bed’. Her flower is the snowdrop…
In Ireland it is St Brigid’s day, where ‘the Bride of Kildare’ is said to have helped the Virgin give birth to Jesus and in so doing became known as the protector of pregnant women and midwives. She also cared for Mary’s cows, hence her other title, ‘Christ’s milkmaid’.
For general (non academic purposes ) interest…
Wikipedia article: Brigit of Kildare
Have a good day,
Janette Allotey