NEWES FROM NEW-ENGLAND: OF A most strange and prodigious Birth, brought to Boston in New-England, October the 17. being a true and exact Relation, brought over April 19. 1642. by a Gentleman of good worth, now resident in London. Also other Relations of six strange and pro­digious Births in these Countries following.

The 1. from New-England. The 2 from Quieres. The 3d. in Ravena. The 4. in Parts. The 5. in St. Andwes Church in Paris. The 6. in the Forrest Biera.

TB

Woman, is a creature bringing vsually but one at a birth, but there have beene some who have brought forth two, some three, some four some five, some six, or more at one birth. Empedoches thought that tho abundance of seed was the cause of such numerous birthes: the Stoiks affirme the divers cells or partitions to be the cause: for the seed be­ing variously parted into these partitions, and the concep­tion divided, there are more children brought no other­wise then in rivers, the water beating against divers rocks, is turned into into divers circles or rounds. But Aristotle saith there is no reason to thinke so, for in women that parting of the wombe into cells, as in doggs and sowes taketh no place:

For womens Wombs have but one cavity, parted in­to two recesses, the right and left, nothing comming be­tween; except by chance distinguished by a certain line, for often Twins lye in the same side of the Womb.

Aristotles opinion is, that a woman cannot bring forth more than five children at one birth.

The Maid of Augustus Caesar brought forth nine at a Birth, she and her children dyed.

In the Year 1554 at Bearn in Switzerland, the Wife of Doctor Iohn Gelinger, brought forth five children at one Birth, three Boyes and two Girls.

Albuccasis affirms a Woman to have bin the Mother of seven children at one Birth; and another, who by some externall injury did abort, brought forth five perfe­ctly, shaped in all their parts.

Pliny reports, that it was extant in the Writings of Physitians, that 12. children were born at one birth, and that there was another in Peloponesus, which 4. severall times was delivered of five children at one birth; and that the greater part of those children lived.

It is reported by Dalechampius that Bonaventura the slave of one Savill, a Gentleman of Sena, at one time brought forth 7. children: of which 4. were baptized in [Page]our time, between Sarte and Main in the Parish of Seaux, not far from Chambella: there is a Family and noble House called Maldemeure, the wife of the Lord Malde­meure: the first year she was marryed, brought forth twins: the second year she had three children: the third year 4. the fourth year five: the fifth year six, and of that Birth she dyed.

Of these six one is yet alive, and is Lord of Malde­meur. In the valley of Beaufors, in the County of Anion: a young woman the daughter of Mace Channier, when at one perfect birth she had brought form one child, the tenth day following she fell in labour of of another, but could not be delivered vntill it was plucked from her by force, and was the death of the mother. Martin Cromerus that author of the Polish history, writeth that one Marga­ret a woman sprung from a noble and ancient family near Cracovia and wife to Count Virboslaus, brought forth at one Birth 35 living children vpon the 20th. day of Ia­nuary. In the yeare. 1296, Fransiscus Picus Mirandula writeth, that one Dorothy an Italian had twenty children at two births, at the first 9 at the secony 11, and that she was so big that she was forced to bear vp her belly which lay vpon her knees, with a broad and large scarfe tyed a­bout her necke, as you may see by divers authours.

FINIS.
[woman in bed, two-headed human standing nearby]

LONDON: Printed for JOHN G. SMITH, 1642.

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