Sprouting Grains told Ancient Egyptians of Pregnancy
The oldest known pregnancy tests can be traced to the ancient Egyptian civilization. This test is described, in fragments, in the Carlsberg Papyrus, and also more completely in the Berlin Papyrus (known also as the Brugsch Papyrus). In these medical texts, which date to the New Kingdom, it is mentioned that in order to ascertain if a woman is pregnant, she should urinate separately on a pile of barley and wheat grains.
Ancient Egyptian woman urinated on barley (top) (Sanjay Acharya/ CC BY SA 4.0 ) and wheat (bottom) (Mark Nesbitt/ CC BY SA 4.0 ) grains to detect pregnancy.
If neither of the grains germinate, then the woman is not pregnant. If the barley germinates, then the woman is pregnant with a male child. Conversely, the germination of the wheat is an indication that the woman is carrying a female child.
A laboratory experiment conducted in 1963 shows that there may be some truth in the ancient Egyptian pregnancy test after all. It seems that 70% of the time the urine of pregnant women caused the grains to sprout. On the other hand, the urine of both non-pregnant women and men did not cause the grains to germinate.
Egyptian Fellah woman with her child, Elisabeth Jerichau-Baumann, 1872. ( CC BY 3.0 )
Ancient Greeks Preferred Onions or Honey
The ancient Greeks had some rather more unusual pregnancy tests at their disposal. One of these, for example, is the insertion of an onion into a woman’s vagina overnight. If the woman were not pregnant, her breath would smell of onions the next morning.
The rationale for this test was the belief that a non-pregnant woman’s womb was ‘unobstructed’, and therefore would allow the scent of the onion to travel up to her mouth. Conversely, the womb of a pregnant woman was ‘sealed’, and therefore inhibiting the scent from travelling upwards. A variation of this involved the application of perfumed linen to the genitals.
A modern engraving of Agnodice, an ancient Greek midwife and obstetrician, who according to legend disguised herself as a man in order to practice as a doctor. ( Public Domain )
Another test, as suggested by Hippocrates, was for a woman to drink a mixture of honey and water before bedtime. If the woman experienced bloating and cramps during the night, she was pregnant.
Piss Prophets and the Medieval Pregnancy Test
It may be fair to say that pregnancy tests became even more varied, and perhaps even slightly more bizarre, during the Middle Ages. For example, it was during this period that the so-called ‘piss prophets’ arrived on the scene. These were people who claimed that they were able to tell if a woman was pregnant just by observing her urine. This was achieved by resorting to a popular method of urine examination known as uroscopy.
A Medieval urine wheel. ( OnlineRover)
Apart this procedure, medieval physicians were also using other forms of urine-based pregnancy tests. One of these involved placing a needle into a woman’s urine. If the woman was pregnant, it would rust red or black.
Another involved mixing the urine with wine. As the alcohol reacted with some of the proteins found in a pregnant woman’s urine, this test may have actually had some success in confirming a pregnancy.
‘Portrait of a Woman’ (1505-1506) by Raphael. ( Public Domain )
Hormones and Modern Pregnancy Testing
It was only during the first half of the 20th century that the human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), a hormone that serves as a pregnancy marker, was identified. This hormone is found in the urine of pregnant women, and it was through animal testing that hCG was found to be an indicator of pregnancy.
The post Bizarre Methods of Baby Detection: A Short History of the Pregnancy Test appeared first on IrresistibleMT.
http://ift.tt/2pmX4kz
via IFTTT
No comments:
Post a Comment