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Louise Boursier

Louise Bourgeois Boursier or Louise Bourgeois or Louyse Bourgeous (1563-1636) was a French midwife called The Scholar. Bourgeois' notoriety is that she served as midwife to the French royal family of King Henry IV of France and his wife Marie de Médicis.[1]

Early Life

Bourgeois was born in 1563 in a rural area just outside Paris called faubourg Saint-Germain.[2][3] Her family was wealthy. They lived near the master surgeon Martin Fellow, who for years was a pupil-assistant of Ambroise Pare.[2]

Bourgeois married Fellow in 1584 at the parish of Saint Sulpice.[3] The following is what the register of this parish register reads: The 30 December 1584, married Martin Fellow, barber-surgeon and Loyse Bourgeois.[4] They started living at faubourg Saint-Germain probably by 1586 and definitely by 1588.[3]

King Henri IV attacked Paris in 1589 when Bourgeois had three children.[3] Bourgeois fled behind the city walls of Paris with her children for protection, since her husband was away in the army. She had to abandon most of their valuable possessions at the established rural home because there was no way to get them moved within the city walls.[3]

For an income then Bourgeois took up needlework, which didn't produce enough to live on. Later she took up midwifery as a profession. She could have learned this medical skill from her husband or she could have learned it going to a recently established school for midwives at the Hôtel-Dieu de Paris.[2]

Mid Life

Bourgeois obtained a diploma and licence to legally practice midwifery in 1598 when she passed the examination for that profession. The examining panel consisted of a physician, 2 surgeons, and 2 experiences midwives.[5] She then moved to the rue Saint-Andre´des-Arts with her family and shortly had a large practice in the Latin Quarter. As a skilled midwife her excellent reputation as a professional grew and she was well liked. [2]

Henri IV married Marie de Medici in 1600. Their first child was due in 1601. The King wanted to employ Madame Dupuis to be the royal midwife. Marie de Medici chose Bourgeois instead, who had successfully assisted the childbirths of several young ladies of the Royal Court, and had an excellent reputation as a professional midwife.[6] Between 1601 and 1610 (when Henri IV was killed) six children were born to Marie de Médicis, all assisted by Bourgeois. They were Louis XIII, future King of France (1601), Elizabeth, Queen of Spain (1602), Christine Marie, Duchess of Savoy (1607), Nicolas Henri, Duke of Orléans (1607), Gaston, Duke of Orléans (1608), and Henrietta Maria, Queen of England, Queen of Scots and Queen of Ireland (1609). During the two months of confinement around childbirth she received 500 livres (crowns) for each son delivered and 300 livres (crowns) for each daughter.[2] The average income for a midwife at the time was 50 livres (crowns).[7]

Later Life

Bourgeois was ultimately awarded in 1608 a lump sum of 6,000 livres (crowns) for her services royal midwife. After the birth of Henrietta Maria, the last child, Bourgeois asked for a pension of 600 livres (crowns) per year for being the royal midwife. King Henry IV agreed to 300 livres (crowns), which was considered a reasonable retirement income.[7]

In her "retirement" she wrote to a great extent and made important contributions to obstetrics. Bourgeois wrote a book on childbirth practices in 1609 - the first woman to write such a book.[8] Additional techniques and information was added in 1759 by her descendent, Angelique le Boursier du Courdray, who was also a royal French midwife - who in turn passed this knowledge down to poor women of her time.[8]

She described herself as The first woman practicing my art to take up the pen.[2]

Works

  • 1609 - Diverse Observations on Sterility; Loss of the Ovum after Fecundation, Fecundity and Childbirth; Diseases of Women and of Newborn Infants, sometimes also known as Various Observations on the Sterility, fruit loss, fertility, childbirth and diseases of women and newborn infants. It was the first book on midwifery and childbirth written by a woman.[8] It had practical information on obstetrics. There were basically few texts of this type that existed at the time. Her book, that contained allusions to some 2000 baby childbirths,[9] was translated into Latin, German, Dutch, and English and used until the 1700s.[1]
  • 1617 - Diverse Observations, expanded edition of above obstetrical theory. It also contained a collection of Advice to my daughter.
  • 1626 - Diverse Observations, expanded edition of above obstetrical theory with treatments like doses of iron to treat anemia.
  • 1634 - Collection of Secrets, treatments like podalic version (turning the baby around in certain situations so that it will be delivered feet first), which knowledge became widely assimilated among European midwives and physicians.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2005 | Louise Bourgeois (French midwfe)
  2. ^ a b c d e f Louise Bourgeois (1563–1636): royal midwife of France by P.M. Dunn
  3. ^ a b c d e Perkins, p. 15
  4. ^ Chereau, p. 5
  5. ^ Perkins, p. 17
  6. ^ Perkins, p. 18
  7. ^ a b Perkins, pp. 23
  8. ^ a b c Anzovin, p. 115 The first woman to write a book on childbirth was Louise Boursier (1563-1636), teacher, author, and midwife to the French court for 27 years. In 1609, she wrote a book on midwifery and childbirth practices that was expanded in 1759 by her descendent, Angelique le Boursier du Courdray, who was also a midwife.
  9. ^ Perkins, p. 24

Sources

  • Anzovin, Steven, Famous First Facts 2000, item # 2338, H. W. Wilson Company, ISBN 0-8242-0958-3
  • Chereau, Achille, The six layers of Marie de Medici Queen of France and Navarre, Willem, 1875
  • Perkins, Wendy, Midwifery and Medicine in Early Modern France, University of Exeter Press (UK) 1996, ISBN 0-859894711

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