| Literature DB >> 35206929 |
Sagrario Gómez-Cantarino1,2,3, Laura Romera-Álvarez1,3, Mercedes de Dios-Aguado3,4, María Idoia Ugarte-Gurrutxaga1,2, José Siles-Gonzalez5, Maylene Cotto-Andino3,6.
Abstract
In Spain, the wet nurse had a prominent place in the Court of Philip II (1540-1580), suckling princes. The aim of this review is to identify the role of wet nurses in the Spanish monarchy and the survival of the infants, who were children of Philip II (16th century). A scoping review is presented, studying documents on wet nurses in the Spanish monarchy. The dialectical structural model of care (DSMC) is applied, and three thematic blocks are used to make up the historical-cultural model. Books, chapters and databases were analysed from Cuiden, Pubmed, Scopus, Science Direct and Google Scholar, from January-September 2021. These wet nurses were treated as ladies, as they came from wealthy families related to royalty. The services of wet nurses from neighbouring localities to the court were used. They had to be of good appearance and in excellent health. They were hired because of the need for survival of the infants, children of Philip II. The functions of the four wives of Philip II were relegated to reproduction, childcare, family and monarchical duties. They used empirical medicine in the form of prescriptions for beauty, hygiene and feminine care. The wet nurses were the driving force that promoted the health of babies through breastfeeding.Entities:
Keywords: breastfeeding; health promotion; historical research; infant; maternal; mother; society; special care; wet nurse; woman
Year: 2022 PMID: 35206929 PMCID: PMC8872442 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare10020316
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Figure 1Theoretical dialectical structural model of care (DSMC) model: application of structures. Source: authors’ own elaboration.
Thematic blocks related to the references.
| Database | Search Strategy | Limits | Points Extracted | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PubMed | Special care OR culture care AND infant AND | Title | Woman and queen: fertility | [ |
| Science Direct | ||||
| CINHAL | ||||
| Scopus | ||||
| Cuiden | ||||
| Google Scholar |
Source: authors’ own elaboration.
Figure 2Women and children of Philip II (1540–1580). Source: authors’ own elaboration.
Origin of wet nurses rejected by doctors of the royal family.
| Wet Nurse | Town of Origin | City |
|---|---|---|
| two | Arévalo | Avila |
| one | Del Bisso | Toledo |
| one | Alcalá | Madrid |
| one | Villanueva de los Infantes | C. Real |
| one | Torrejón de Ardoz | Madrid |
| Aldonza de Valdes | Wife of Fernando Ramirez, secretary of the | Murcia |
| two | Illescas | Toledo |
| one | Valdemoro | Madrid |
| one | - | Toledo |
Source: authors’ own elaboration.
Wet nurses who breastfed different infants born to Philip II.
| Wet Nurse | Queens: Mothers of Infants | Infants | Lactation Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dª María de Rivas | Isabel de Valois | Isabel Clara Eugenia | Five months |
| Ana de Austria | Fernando de Austria | Eight months | |
| Dª María de Messa | Isabel de Valois | Catalina Micaela | Twenty-two months |
| Ana de Austria | Fernando de Austria | One month | |
| Dª Leonor de Garay | Ana de Austria | Fernando de Austria | Weaned the infant in 1574 |
| Diego Félix | 3 Days | ||
| Felipe II | Not known |
Source: authors’ own elaboration.
Queens/wives of Philip II and their children as well as wet nurses and their renumeration.
| Queens: Wives of Philip II | Children | Wet Nurse | Remuneration | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manuela de Portugal | Carlos de Austria | Dª Ana de Luzón | Unknown dowry | Fifteen months |
| María I de Inglaterra | No offspring | - | - | - |
| Isabel de Valois | Isabel Clara Eugenia | Dª Ana López | Two hundred ducats | Three days |
| Doña Beatriz de Mendoza | Two hundred ducats + thirty thousand mrs annual pension + husband’s office | Four months | ||
| Doña María de Oviedo | Sixty thousand mrs annual pension | Fourteen months | ||
| Doña María de Rivas | Two hundred ducats annual pension + thirty thousand mrs | Five months | ||
| Catalina Micaela | Doña María de Messa | One hundred thousand mrs annual pension + beds + job for his daughter | Twenty-two | |
| Ana de Austria | Fernando de Austria | Doña María de Terán | Two hundred ducats + one hundred escudos in gold + dress of 32,509 mrs. | Twenty-four |
| Doña María de Mesa | Unknown dowry | Eight months | ||
| Doña María de Rivas | Black taffeta clothingof 21,232 mrs | One month | ||
| Luisa Fernández | Four shirts and two headdresses | One month | ||
| Isabel Grado Mayor | Two hundred ducats | Nine months + twenty-one days | ||
| Juana Baustitina | One hundred thousand for life + dress of 9400 mrs. | - | ||
| Doña Leonor de Garay | Not known | She weaned him at the age of three (1574) | ||
| Carlos Lorenzo | Doña María de Neira | Not known | Two months | |
| Doña Isabel de Galindo | Eighty thousand mrs for life + beds | One year and a half | ||
| Diego Félix | María de Valdés | Not known | One month | |
| Doña Leonor de Garay | Not known | Four days | ||
| Doña Felipa de Mármol | Life pension of 60,000 mrs per annum | Eight months | ||
| Doña Magdalena Pachón | Clothes and three hundred ducats | Four months | ||
| Isabel Páez de la Fuente | 50,000 mrs for life | Three months | ||
| Felipe III | Doña Leonor de Garay | Not known | Not known | |
| Doña Francisca de Urbina | Not known | Not known | ||
| Doña Felipa de Espinosa | Not known | Not known | ||
| Francisca de Torquemada | Not known | Ninety-one days | ||
| Doña Mariana de Vargas | Crimson damask bed + fifty thousand mrs per annum | Four months |
Source: authors’ own elaboration.