The Medieval Womb
Hildegard of Bingen’s Views on the Female Reproductive Body
Abstract
This study of the twelfth-century German abbess Hildegard of Bingen examines her understanding of the womb through her medical work Cause et cure and visionary work Scivias. Medieval tradition viewed female bodies negatively, seeing their porous nature as easily polluted. Women were considered weaker and more vulnerable to spiritual invasion. This volume shows how Hildegard’s revolutionary understanding of the female reproductive body reversed these assumptions. She connected female bodily flows not to pollution but to purification, presenting menstruation and reproductive fluids as vital components in natural cleansing and healing processes. The book concludes with a chapter showing how Hildegard's concept of beneficial bodily flow remains relevant in modern Western and non-Western alternative medicine, in which female bodily porosity and fluid exchange continue to be understood as sources of regenerative power.
Keywords
Hildegard of Bingen; medieval women; reproductionISBN
9781802702224, 9781802702224, 9781802700398, 9781802703764Publisher
Arc Humanities PressPublisher website
https://arc-humanities.org/Publication date and place
2025Imprint
Arc Humanities PressClassification
Medieval Western philosophy
History of medicine
Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval
Christianity
History of religion
Gender studies: women and girls


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