{"product_id":"raynalde-thomas","title":"RAYNALDE, Thomas.","description":"\u003cp\u003e.Very handsome copy of the first printed book in English on midwifery. The authorship is debated. The original work   an English translation of Eucharius Rosslin s famous  De partu hominis  (1532) - was produced, with additions, by the obscure Richard Jonas; the printer\/publisher Thomas Raynalde allegedly revised the text for the second ed., and was henceforward identified as the author of the book (Ballantyne, p.299ff). The 1560 ed. (the fourth) provided the basis for all later eds. The famous illustrations - of female reproductive organs, a birth chair and 16 presentations of the foetus within the womb, including 4 of twins   faultlessly reprise those in Rosslin s  De partu hominis . Rosslin s were  the earliest obstetrical illustrations printed from wood blocks , with  the four woodcuts of the egg membranes and the placenta being later taken from Vesalius   Fabrica  (Heirs of Hippocrates). As a vernacular work,  Birth of Man-kinde' would have been used by physicians and midwives alike, in Britain. Indeed, the prologue is addressed to  women Readers , as this book had been known to  frequent and haunt women in their labours, carrying with them this book in their hands,   to be read before the Midwife  - which suggests the book was also intended to be read aloud. Book I provides an overview of female anatomy, with reference to the anatomical woodcuts. Book II discusses types of birth (natural, unnatural, difficult, painful), remedies to make women s labour  tolerable , miscarriage,  untimely birth  and stillborn babies. Book III examines how to take care of a newborn, including breastfeeding and the most common illnesses, e.g., colic, cough, blisters, swelling of the eyes, the navel or the body more generally, worms, epilepsy and squint eyes. Book IV is devoted to conception, causes and remedies for sterility, as well as remedies to beautify men and women (e.g., conceal freckles, eliminate warts and bad breath, smooth the skin, keep one s teeth clean). A most important work for early modern medical practice in Britain, whilst renamed a vade-mecum on childbirth into the C18. .\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"RAYNALDE, Thomas.","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":57868684099919,"sku":"L4332","price":12500.0,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/1016\/2425\/0703\/files\/L4332-2.jpg?v=1781793472","url":"https:\/\/sokol-books-ltd.myshopify.com\/products\/raynalde-thomas","provider":"Sokol Books Ltd","version":"1.0","type":"link"}