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Mary, Mary Page, and Brennan.  Infants were breastfed for a much longer period than today to decrease fertility in women.  Upper Class women thought.

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Presentation on theme: "Mary, Mary Page, and Brennan.  Infants were breastfed for a much longer period than today to decrease fertility in women.  Upper Class women thought."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mary, Mary Page, and Brennan

2  Infants were breastfed for a much longer period than today to decrease fertility in women.  Upper Class women thought breastfeeding was crude.  Wet Nursing was a popular method in which babies were shipped to the country side where another women nursed the child for the first few years of its life.  “Killing Nurses” often let babies die on purpose so they could make room for new children and more profits.

3  Parents allowed their children (mostly girls) to die if they were unable to support them.  The church denounced infanticide as a pagan practice.  Parents who could not support their children would often leave them on the doorsteps to churches. These babies were known as “foundlings.”  Homes and hospitals for foundlings were developed in Europe. Foundling hospitals took in about 100,000 children per year, however the majority of children in foundling homes and hospitals died anyway.

4  18 th century parents were unconcerned with their children.  One Englishman claimed that he, “had more interest in the diseases of his horses than of his children.”  Hospitals and doctors rarely agreed to see children because of the high child mortality rate.  18 th century parents raised their children with strict physical discipline and indifference.

5  Elementary schools for boys ages 7- 12 began appearing in 17 th century Europe and taught basic literacy and religion.  The church encouraged reading so that they could teach the Bible more effectively.  Prussia was first to stress universal education and required children to attend elementary schools.  The literacy rate in Europe drastically increased between 1600 and 1800.

6  The Bible was popular choice for reading.  Short pamphlets called “chap-books” focused on religious subjects.  Fairy Tales, Medieval Romance stories, Fictionalized History, and Adventure stories were also popular because they allowed the average person to escape the troubles and hardships of everyday life.  Almanacs contained fun facts.

7  This book encouraged parents to treat their children with kindness.  Education should be used in order to prevent corruption in children.  Discussed the importance of teaching boys and girls different curriculums so that they may achieve their full potential later in life.

8  1. 18 th century parents in Europe typically treated children  A. As a burden  B. With indifference and emotional detachment  C. With extreme physical discipline  D. All the above  2. Jean Jacques Rousseau was most likely to agree with which of the following statements…  A. It is of no use for girls to receive an education  B. Children are formed into model citizens through harsh discipline  C. Boys and girls should be educated differently.  D. As children become more educated, they also become corrupted.  3. Foundling homes and hospitals…  A. Were safe and healthy places for abandoned children  B. Provided abandoned children with an education.  C. Were dangerously overcrowded, causing many children to die.  D. Were frowned upon by the upper class.  4. Nursing in the 18 th century…  A. Was common among upper class women.  B. Was beneficial to both infants and their mothers  C. Ended quickly, usually after the first year of an infant’s life.  D. Was always performed by the infant’s mother.


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