The history of underwear sheds light on what women
                              used for menstruation.
                          What
                              women used in earlier times: See nineteenth-century
                              Norwegian washable pads and an Italian washable
                            "rag" from before 1900 - German patterns for
                            washable pads, about 1900 - Japanese patterns
                            for washable pads (early 20th century) -
                            Contemporary washable
                            pads - Women sometimes wore washable pads
                            with a sanitary
                              apron - Egyptian
                              hieroglyphics telling of tampon use -
                            The first commercial tampons,
                            (U.S.A., 1930s) - Menstrual cups (1930s) -
                            Special underpants
                          
                          
                          
                          
                          
                              
                             
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                                    Articles and
                                      comments about women and
                                      menstruation in 17th
                                                  century England
                                    
                                    John Freind, the number 7, and
                                      why women have periods by Dr
                                    Sara Read 
                                     
                                    John Freind (1676-1728) graduated
                                    with an MB from Christ Church,
                                    Oxford in 1701, and in 1704 he
                                    became the Professor of Chemistry
                                    there. He was a very famous
                                    physician in his day.  
                                      
                                    Freind was an advocate of Isaac
                                    Newton’s ideas about physics and
                                    used these to inform his theories of
                                    menstruation. In fact, though,
                                    Freind was not an innovator in his
                                    ideas, and more often than not, he
                                    used physics to prove the ‘truth’ of
                                    the ancient ideas about the reasons
                                    for menstruation as set out by
                                    Hippocrates in the first century CE. 
                                     
                                    In Emmenologia Freind wrote
                                    that menstrual periods commonly
                                    began when a girl reached the age of
                                    14 and continued until the age of 49
                                    as he believed in the Pythagorean
                                    ideas about the perfection of the
                                    number 7. Freind writes, ‘The
                                    menstrous Purgation, or a flux of
                                    Blood issuing from the Uterus every
                                    Month, usually begins its Periods at
                                    the Second Septenary, and terminates
                                    at the Seventh, or the Square of the
                                    number seven’ (p. 1). He also wrote
                                    against the myths that abounded
                                    about the ‘poisonous’ nature of
                                    menstrual blood saying that ‘healthy
                                    persons, that blood which is ejected
                                    is not at all impure or tainted, but
                                    very good and fragrant’ (p. 4). He
                                    also reiterated Hippocratic ideas by
                                    writing rather graphically that the
                                    blood lost in a period should be
                                    ‘ruddy and florid resembling the
                                    Blood flowing out of the Veins of a
                                    Sacrifice newly slain’ (p. 2).
                                    Freind explained that he thought
                                    there were two main reasons why
                                    women have periods:  
                                    1. To clear out the womb
                                      to make it ready for a pregnancy,
                                      and 2. To ensure that women had a
                                      store of blood to nourish the
                                      unborn child.  
                                     
                                    It was a normal early-modern belief
                                    that the foetus was nourished by the
                                    mother’s menstrual blood (they
                                    believed that this was the reason
                                    women do not have periods when
                                    they’re pregnant).  
                                    Freind believed that the amount of
                                    blood a woman might lose at a period
                                    will vary from woman to woman but
                                    that it was often around a pint: 
                                    The quantity of the
                                      evacuated Blood is different
                                      according to the variety of
                                      Constitutions, Diet, Age, or the
                                      Like; yet in healthy and adult
                                      Persons it commonly amounts to
                                      twenty Ounces, which agrees with
                                      the measure assigned by
                                      Hippocrates, namely two Heminas.
                                      (p. 1) 
                                     
                                    A ‘hermina’ is approximate to half
                                    an imperial pint. This is far
                                    greater than the norms quoted in
                                    medical literature today which say
                                    2-3 fluid ounces is typical.
                                    Freind’s book was challenged by
                                    other writers in the eighteenth
                                    century, but remains famous for
                                      being the first one published just
                                      on periods alone.  
                                     
                                    See a portrait of John Freind
                                      (1725) at
<http://www.npgprints.com/image/806597/george-vertue-michael-dahl-john-freind> 
                                     
                                    © 2013 Sara Read 
                                     
                                    Dr Sara Read is a teacher in the
                                    department of English and Drama at
                                    Loughborough University, England.
                                    She was awarded a PhD on the topic
                                    of menstruation in early-modern
                                    England in 2010, which is currently
                                    being turned into a book, and has
                                    written a number of articles on the
                                    topic. She is co-editor of an
                                    anthology of seventeenth-century
                                    women’s writing which is being
                                    published by Manchester University
                                    Press in 2013.  
............................................................................................. 
                                    More from Dr Read (and more): 
                                      
                                    
                                    Did
                                                  many women
                                                  intentionally
                                                  menstruate
                                                    into their clothing
                                                  in 17th-century
                                                  Britain? "Thy
                                          righteousness is but a
                                          menstrual clout: sanitary
                                          practices and prejudice in
                                          early modern England" 
                                       
                                    
                                        
                                      See
                                                  Dr Read's articles in
                                                  the MUM bibliography. 
                                             
                                        
                                    
                                    Other Out of the Past topics: 
                                     
                                    
                                    page
                                            © 2013 Harry Finley 
                                        
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