Women In The Middle Ages Came Up With Clever Ways Of Faking Their Virginity, And Some Of Them Are Absolutely Mind-Boggling
Back in the Middle Ages (a.k.a. the Medieval era, approximately 476-1450 A.D.), virginity was an extremely desirable trait in a wife. As second-class citizens, women were highly encouraged to get married because they couldn't own property, which made being a virgin bride a valuable bargaining chip.
Virginity was extremely attractive in a wife "primarily because it was the surest method to guarantee paternity," Karen Harris and Lori Caskey-Sigety, authors of The Medieval Vagina: An Historical and Hysterical Look at All Things Vaginal During the Middle Ages, said in a blog post.
"A high value was placed on virginity, making it a commodity of sorts. As with all things, once a value is assigned to an object, people will go to great lengths to prove its authenticity and to regain it if it is lost."
Society had multiple ways of determining whether or not a woman was a virgin. She might have undergone an inspection from a midwife to see if her hymen was intact or would have been expected to show bloody sheets after the wedding night.
But, as a medical practitioner of the time said in The cases of impotency and virginity fully discuss'd, "There are a thousand ways of losing the marks of virginity, without having to do with a man; there are in like manner, a thousand ways of recovering them again, when it has been really lost by having to do with a man."
If a bride had a little pre-marital indiscretion or was even just anxious, she'd need to figure out a way to fake it — and fortunately, there were several options available at the time. Here are 7 of the wildest ways women managed to fake their virginity in the Middle Ages:
1.Women could find a midwife to perform their inspection who would say they were a virgin even if they weren't.
2.Women could place a leech on their labia to create a scab that would be torn open and bleed on their wedding night.
A few days before their marriage and subsequent consummation, women could attach a leech to their vulva that would create a small wound. They'd remove it, allow the wound to scab over, and then the friction of their wedding night activities would tear open the scab, causing them to bleed.
In his book Natural Magick, published in 1558, John Baptista Porta details how this could have been completed with the help of a midwife.
And The Trotula: A Medieval Compendium of Women's Medicine, published in the 12th century, says, "What is better is if the following is done one night before she is married: let her place leeches in the vagina (but take care that they do not go in too far) so that blood comes out and is converted into a little clot. And thus the man will be deceived by the effusion of blood."
3.Women could pour a small vial of animal blood on the sheets when their new husband wasn't looking.
4.Women could create a poultice or wash with a concoction of some kind to tighten things up down there for the wedding night.
It also recommends taking "the newly grown bark of a holm oak. Having ground it, dissolve it with rainwater, and with a linen or cotton cloth, place it in the vagina in the above-mentioned manner. And remove all these things before the hour of the commencement of intercourse."
Reminder: this medieval Cinderella may not have had access to a clock at home (they started appearing in homes around the 1300s), so this might require some skillful timing.
Another option from The Trotula is taking "oak apples, roses, sumac, great plantain, comfrey, Armenian bole, alum, and fuller’s earth, of each one ounce. Let them be cooked in rainwater, and with this water, let the genitals be fomented."
They also used alum water, which "is a chemical compound of hydrated potassium aluminum sulfate used to tan leather and pickle meats and set the dye in wool," Harris and Caskey-Sigety said. "A key property of alum water is that it is an astringent. It shrinks and tightens skin. So used in the vaginal area, alum water could shrink the tissue, giving the illusion of virginity, without actually replacing the hymen."
5.Women could insert rings, resin, or suppositories into their vaginas that would provide extra resistance.
Phas / Universal Images Group via Getty Images, @bejayoharen / Via giphy.com
"These devices acted like a surrogate hymen," said Harris and Caskey-Sigety. Safe to assume the gentleman in the first image is none the wiser.
6.Women could fumigate their vaginas with some type of herbal substance intended to repair their ruptured hymen.
7.Finally, women could take the spiritual course and simply wait seven years.
Personally, I'm very glad women can own property these days, least of all so that no one feels the need to go through outlandish purity tests. Still, it's nice to know that even hundreds of years ago, women could take a bit of power back for themselves — even if it meant putting a leech on their hoo-has.