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By Laurence Totelin. In my last blog post , I discussed some ancient gender tests. This month, I turn to Greek fertility tests. In the Greek world, women only entered full womanhood upon conception and delivery of a child, preferably a boy. It is therefore no wonder that one of the treatises of the Hippocratic Corpus a collection of some sixty texts written in the fifth and fourth centuries BCE was devoted to the issue of barrenness: On Sterile Women.
This tract includes a few fertility tests, aimed at predicting whether a woman will become pregnant or not. Tests by means of which you will know whether a woman will be pregnant. If you want to know whether a woman will be pregnant: give to drink butter [or a plant called boutyron] and the milk of a woman who has borne a male child, whilst she is fasting. If she vomits, she will be pregnant; if not, she will not.
Another: Let her wrap some oil of bitter almonds in wool and apply as a pessary. Check in the morning whether she smells of it through the mouth; if she smells, she will be pregnant, if not, she will not. Another test for the same purpose: apply pessaries that are not particularly strong. If she has pains in the joints, suffers from clattering teeth, dizziness, and yawning, there is more hope that she will pregnant than if she who does not suffer from any of these afflictions.
Another: Having washed and peeled a head of garlic, apply it to the womb, and see the next day whether she smells of it through the mouth; if she smells, she will be pregnant, if not, she will not. If you want to know whether a woman will be pregnant, let here drink finely pounded anise in water, then let her sleep.
If she itches around the navel, she will be pregnant; if not, she will not. Every single one of these tests would deserve a long explanation, especially since possible Egyptian parallels exist for some of these recipes.