Reconsidering obstetric death and
female fertility in Anglo-Saxon England
Duncan Sayer and Sam D. Dickinson
Abstract
Little has been written about female fertility and maternal mortality from an archaeological
perspective. Typically debates focus on the physical aspects of childbirth, ignoring an
obvious truth: the biggest single cause of death for women was childbirth. Whether death
took place as a result of mechanical malpresentation, infection or blood loss, the root cause
was undeniable. In this article we argue that post-mortem extrusion is improbable and that
young infants and women found buried together are likely to have died together. However,
most deaths would not have been simultaneous and so we build on demographic data to
conclude that the early Anglo-Saxons engaged institutions which controlled female sexuality.
Late marriage, cultural and legal taboos and an emphasis on mature fertility acted to limit the
probability of death; however, the risk to the individual was real and each funerary party was
the agent that constructed death ways to manage loss.
Keywords
Taphonomy; coffin birth; maternal mortality; fertility; special burial.
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for free at – http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00438243.2013.799044
World Archaeology Vol. 45(2): 285–297 The Beginnings of Life
© 2013 The Author(s). Published by Taylor & Francis. ISSN 0043-8243 print/1470-1375 online
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00438243.2013.799044
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