Queen Caroline's Umbilical Hernia

被引:0
|
作者
Nakayama, Don K. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ N Carolina, Sch Med, Div Pediat Surg, Dept Surg, 170 Manning Dr,G196 Phys Off Bldg, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA
关键词
Queen Caroline; incarcerated umbilical hernia; history of surgery; John Ranby; Company of Barbers and Surgeons;
D O I
10.1177/00031348221114032
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Never a monarch nor head of state, Queen Caroline of Ansbach (1683-1737) is among the legendary women rulers of England and Great Britain alongside Queens Elizabeth I and II, Queen Victoria, and Lady Margaret Thatcher. As queen consort, she was the acknowledged power behind the throne of her husband, King George II (1683-1760), working with Robert Walpole, the first Prime Minister of England. George accepted her intellectual superiority and backstage dominance even before he acceded to the throne in 1727. "[He had] no pretensions toward intellect and [was] basically interested in little more than military glory, political power, and a wife who would do her duty by providing him with male heirs," wrote popular historian John Van de Kiste. After they were wed in 1705, Caroline carried out her task with a remarkable fecundity: a male heir, Frederick Louis, in 1707, followed by Anne (1709), Amelia (1711), Caroline (1713), George William (1717), William (1721), Mary (1723), and Louise (1724). With good reason she believed that her influence over George came from his sexual attraction to her. It was a conceit that proved to be her undoing as she strove to hide from common knowledge an unsightly umbilical hernia. The rupture caused her death in 1737 at age 54. It strangulated, perforated, and spilled feculent succus entericus and fetid fluid onto the royal bed, a vivid example of the consequences of an untreated surgical condition.
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页码:5 / 8
页数:4
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