Delivering Knowledge: Jewish Midwives and Hidden Healing in Early Modern Europe
Jordan R. Katz
Stanford University Press (April/May 2026)
Series: Stanford Studies in Jewish History and Culture
This
book offers a new perspective on the history of early modern Jewish
communities by centering the experiences of Jewish midwives. In the wake
of the Thirty Years' War, as cities and towns across northern and
central Europe placed new emphasis on the regulation of healthcare and
childbirth, Jewish midwives stood at the crossroads of tremendous
changes in both Jewish communities and the surrounding Christian
municipalities. Drawing on previously untapped archival sources, Jordan
Katz reveals that Jewish midwives were integral to the expansion of
medical bureaucracies, crossing boundaries between genders, between
religious communities, and across classes through their work caring for
pregnant women and newborn babies.
Grounded
in rich historical evidence, the book shows how a focus on Jewish
midwives illuminates the complex relationships between Jewish
communities and local municipalities, showcasing a level of engagement
between Jews and Christian civic authorities that has gone unstudied.
Through the lens of midwives, this book opens up new understandings of
Jewish communal history, the history of women's healing practices,
Jewish-Christian relations, and cultures of record in the early modern
period.

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