The King Who Symbolizes How Women Ended Up Giving Birth on Their Backs
A colorful royal anecdote, a centuries-long medical shift, and how each new “solution” made the original problem harder to fix
There is a position that over a billion women have given birth in. A position so normalized, so standard, so embedded in the hospital experience that most people assume it must be the most natural, medically optimal way to bring a child into the world.
It isn’t. And the history of how it became the default involves a voyeuristic king, the rise of male-dominated obstetrics, a new surgical instrument, and the slow disappearance of the midwife.
Louis XIV is often cited as the villain of this story. The reality is messier — and in some ways more troubling — than that.

















