Swaddling
The
medical rationale in seventeenth-century England: the limbs of a child were
tender and could easily bow or bend, taking diverse shapes. There was also the
popular fear that unless restrained an infant might tear off its own ears,
scratch out its eyes or break its legs. Modern studies have shown that
swaddling is convenient for adults, since it slows down the infant’s heartbeat,
induces longer sleep and makes for less crying. Russian infants to this very
day are still swaddled.
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