Women
today choose from a wide spectrum of reliable contraceptive techniques, from the
pill to the diaphragm to the condom, interspersed with various spermicidal
sponges, creams, and jellies. There are, in theory, birth control methods to
suit women of every age, shape and life style. But how did women of ancient
China avoid unwanted pregnancies?
Zhao Feiyan and Zhao Hede, two beautiful concubines in the court of Emperor
Chendi (51 BC -7 BC) of the Western Han Dynasty (202 BC –AD 8), controlled their
fertility by rubbing musk into their navels, according to historical records.
Prostitutes in ancient China rarely experienced unplanned pregnancies. The
herbal soup, or "liangyao," of which musk was an ingredient, that they drank
before going to work was effective enough to cause eventual sterility. But other
birth control potions containing mercury, strychnine, and arsenic that certain
ladies
of the night took were far more dangerous. Metal deposits that accumulate in the
internal organs over years cause bodily dysfunctions, amnesia, lowered immunity,
chronic pain, and death.
Modern scientific research shows that
small doses of mercury prevent pregnancy by causing menstrual problems, manifest
in heavy bleeding, lengthened menses and dysmenorrhoea, or menstrual pain. Metal
infusing the placenta also prompts miscarriages.
Certain classical contraceptive methods, as correctly administered by
imperial physicians, did prevent pregnancies without causing harm. After sex
with concubines or court ladies with whom he had no desire to procreate, for
example, the emperor would order the appropriate eunuch to clean out their
vaginas with saffron herbal soup.
But contraception was not the sole responsibility of women, even in imperial
China. Condoms made of sheep intestines and fish lungs are mentioned in the
ancient volume Classics of Mountains and Seas, a treasure trove of rare data on
rituals, medicine, natural history, and ethnic peoples of the ancient world, as
well as stories of the adventures of mythical figures. Contraceptive sheaths
were also fashioned in silk and cotton. The rhythm method was common, and women
also used sponges as a barrier method of birth control.
One folk contraception remedy consists of grinding seven dried persimmon
pedicels, steeping the powder in boiling water, and drinking the brew for seven
days.
So there appears to have been a wide choice of birth control in early
imperial China. Women ancients, whether palace concubines or street whores, had
means of avoiding pregnancy, the latter at the risk – at best -- of sterility or
at worst of death. But they had no choice, as an unwanted child in any event
amounted to an economic death sentence.
(Source: zhishik.cn / Translated by womenofchina.cn)