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  • 00:01

    I’m Beth Lander, the Librarian for the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, home to the

  • 00:07

    Mütter Museum and the Historical Medical Library. I’d like to take you on a virtual

  • 00:11

    walkthrough through one of our previous exhibits, Imperfecta.

  • 00:16

    The main story of Imperfecta examines the shifting perceptions about abnormal human

  • 00:21

    development, from fear and wonder to curiosity and clinical science, beginning in the sixteenth

  • 00:27

    century and ending in the nineteenth. The underlying story is about how people communicate

  • 00:32

    about things we find disturbing or frightening. We begin in the town of Ravenna, Italy, in

  • 00:38

    1512. On April 11, 1512, French troops captured the city of Ravenna after a major battle with

  • 00:45

    soldiers of Pope Julius II. Angered by his defeat, the Pope ordered the death by starvation

  • 00:51

    of a baby who had been born near the city only weeks earlier.

  • 00:56

    This baby was so deformed that an apothecary (pharmacist) who lived in Florence said, “It

  • 01:04

    was evident what evil the monster had meant for [Ravenna]! It seems as if some great misfortune

  • 01:10

    always befalls the city when such things are born.”

  • 01:14

    The Monster of Ravenna is one of the best known examples in the field of teratology,

  • 01:19

    which is the study of physiological abnormalities and abnormal functions.

  • 01:24

    I don’t use the term “monster” lightly. It is a term used by physicians well into

  • 01:30

    the 20th century to denote a fetus or infant with pronounced developmental anomalies that

  • 01:37

    are considered grotesque and usually nonviable. The story of the Monster of Ravenna and other

  • 01:43

    abnormal births were documented in the sixteenth century in two types of texts. The first were

  • 01:49

    books written by physicians and other healers. The second type are called “prodigy books.”

  • 01:55

    A prodigy book depicts abnormally formed humans and animals as supernatural portents or omens.

  • 02:03

    Many prodigy books presented monstrosities as warning signs from God and often used them

  • 02:09

    as ways to make political, religious, or social statements. Several monsters were so notorious

  • 02:16

    that they appeared in numerous books. The woodcut used to illustrate the Monster

  • 02:21

    of Ravenna was reused, repurposed and recut as the image moved across Europe, allowing

  • 02:27

    people in different areas to interpret their fears in different ways.

  • 02:32

    One of the prodigy books on display in Imperfecta was Jakob Rüff’s book A cheerful consolation

  • 02:39

    book on the generation and birth of humans, which was published in 1554. This book was

  • 02:45

    different from many other popular prodigy books at the time because it was a practical

  • 02:49

    manual for midwives. It was one of the first prodigy books that considered physical, rather

  • 02:56

    than just supernatural, causes for monstrous births.

  • 03:00

    We can also find both supernatural and natural causes for monstrous births in the works of

  • 03:05

    Ambroise Paré. Pare was a French barber-surgeon, a medical practitioner who, unlike most university

  • 03:13

    trained physicians at the time, performed surgery, especially during times of war.

  • 03:18

    Paré’s book, which I will refer to as “The Works,” was published in 1575. This book

  • 03:27

    has a chapter called “On Monsters,” which combined images of abnormal births and fantastic,

  • 03:34

    sometimes imaginary, animals. Like Rüff, Paré considered the possible

  • 03:39

    causes of abnormal births. He listed thirteen causes, including the “smallness of the

  • 03:45

    womb,” “the glory or wrath of God,” and “the artifice of wicked spiral beggars.”

  • 03:52

    Among Paré’s thirteen causes were two reasons specific to the mother: the smallness of her

  • 03:59

    womb, or the “indecent posture” of her body. Many people throughout history believed

  • 04:06

    that women could give birth to monsters by looking at disturbing images during conception

  • 04:11

    or having “unwholesome desires” during pregnancy. People also assumed that eating

  • 04:16

    certain foods, like strawberries, could cause birthmarks.

  • 04:20

    These beliefs motivated women to follow rituals and health regimens to promote the birth of

  • 04:26

    a healthy child, often assisted by a midwife. Like today, midwives’ treatments were often

  • 04:33

    holistic in nature. One treatment used to promote healthy babies and births included

  • 04:40

    soaking Bible verses in water that would then be given to the mother to drink.

  • 04:45

    Midwives referenced herbals, books containing the names and descriptions of plants, usually

  • 04:50

    with information on their medicinal properties, to make drinks and medicines for women during

  • 04:56

    pregnancy. Midwives also delivered children, and were trained to use obstetric tools in

  • 05:01

    difficult births. During the seventeenth century, attitudes

  • 05:05

    toward abnormal births began to change. They began to be perceived not just as omens, but

  • 05:11

    also as objects of curiosity. Fortunio Liceti, an Italian physician who

  • 05:16

    was born in 1577, was one of the first authors to present monsters as lusus naturae or “freaks

  • 05:24

    of nature,” instead of symbols of impending doom or the influence of God. Liceti believed

  • 05:30

    that monsters were evidence of nature’s ability to create wondrous things even when

  • 05:35

    using damaged material. This perspective began to open the door for a more scientific study

  • 05:41

    of monsters. Curiosity continued to drive physicians to

  • 05:45

    search for natural causes of physical anomalies.

  • 05:49

    One of the most fascinating stories in Imperfecta is the ‘Hühnermensch,” which, translated

  • 05:54

    from the German, means “chicken man.” The Hühnermensch was born in a small town

  • 06:00

    near Leipzig, Germany, in 1735, to a 28 year old woman, Johanna Schmeid. Unlike her three

  • 06:07

    previous healthy children, her fourth was stillborn and had numerous physical anomalies:

  • 06:13

    a comb-like structure on the head; large, round eyes; and hands with lengthy fingers

  • 06:19

    and “claws exactly like those of a chicken.” The attending physician, Gottlieb Friderici,

  • 06:25

    performed an autopsy and published his findings in the essay The rarest of human monsters.

  • 06:32

    Friderici determined that the deformities were the result of crossbreeding between a

  • 06:37

    human and a rooster. Later examinations of the specimen indicate that the child was born

  • 06:42

    with a severe form of Roberts Syndrome, a genetic disorder that causes deformed limbs

  • 06:48

    and face. The start of the 19th century led to some

  • 06:52

    of the first detailed scientific studies of monstrous births. Adolph Wilhelm Otto, who

  • 06:59

    was born in 1786, was the Professor of Anatomy and Director of the Anatomical Museum in Breslau.

  • 07:06

    Otto was a specialist in the newly emerging field of teratology. He published 600 Anatomic

  • 07:13

    Descriptions of Monsters in 1841, an atlas that gained popularity outside the field of

  • 07:20

    teratology. The atlas contained detailed descriptions, including notes on internal anatomy compiled

  • 07:26

    during complete dissections of specimens. Barton Cooke Hirst, who was a fellow of the

  • 07:32

    College of Physicians of Philadelphia, the parent institution of the Mutter Museum, co-published

  • 07:35

    an atlas in 1891 titled Human Monstrosities, one of the first English-language books to

  • 07:41

    classify monsters. Hirst was on the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania’s medical

  • 07:47

    school. His atlas classified anomalies found only in stillborn or aborted fetuses.

  • 07:52

    The 19th century also saw the monetization of disability through freak shows and circuses.

  • 07:59

    One of the most famous examples were the conjoined twins, Chang and Eng Bunker, whose death cast

  • 08:05

    and liver are on display here at the Mütter Museum.

  • 08:09

    Unlike many differently abled people who were taken advantage of at the time, Chang and

  • 08:14

    Eng were able to manage their own careers after their 18th birthday. Chang and Eng were

  • 08:20

    successful until the end of the American Civil War, when they nearly went bankrupt. They

  • 08:25

    accepted an offer from P.T. Barnum to appear at his American Museum. They died in 1874,

  • 08:32

    and their bodies were autopsied at The College of Physicians of Philadelphia.

  • 08:36

    Millie and Christine McKoy were conjoined twins who were not able to enjoy the same

  • 08:41

    agency as the Bunkers. Known as the "Carolina Twins," the McKoys were born into slavery

  • 08:47

    in 1851 in North Carolina. They struggled to gain control over their finances, as well

  • 08:53

    as how they were exhibited in public. They died of tuberculosis in 1912.

  • 08:59

    Today, news about abnormal births travels via social media and television rather than

  • 09:05

    woodcuts used to illustrate books. When Zika virus became prevalent in 2013, images of

  • 09:13

    babies born with microcephaly flooded media, media that was also used to educate people

  • 09:19

    how to avoid being infected. Modern medicine has proven that genetic mutations

  • 09:24

    and exposure to toxins are to blame for abnormal births, not divine influence. However, simply

  • 09:31

    because something – such as abnormal human development – has been studied and classified

  • 09:36

    by medical science, does not mean that it cannot touch the deepest part of our psyche,

  • 09:41

    making us question what it means to be imperfect. If you’d like to explore some of the topics

  • 09:48

    presented in Imperfecta in more in-depth, check out our digital exhibit, Further into

  • 09:53

    Imperfecta, at the link shown here.

All

The example sentences of CONSOLATION in videos (15 in total of 16)

arabic proper noun, singular historians noun, plural may modal find verb, base form consolation verb, base form in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner crucial adjective historical adjective role noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner ottoman proper noun, singular empire proper noun, singular in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner 16th adjective 17th adjective century noun, singular or mass .
one cardinal number of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner prodigy noun, singular or mass books noun, plural on preposition or subordinating conjunction display noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction imperfecta proper noun, singular was verb, past tense jakob proper noun, singular ruff proper noun, singular s proper noun, singular book noun, singular or mass a determiner cheerful adjective consolation noun, singular or mass
for preposition or subordinating conjunction dainties noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present all determiner kates proper noun, singular , and coordinating conjunction therefore adverb , kate proper noun, singular , take verb, base form this determiner of preposition or subordinating conjunction me personal pronoun , kate proper noun, singular of preposition or subordinating conjunction my possessive pronoun consolation noun, singular or mass ,
not adverb just adjective teenagers noun, plural and coordinating conjunction people noun, plural in preposition or subordinating conjunction their possessive pronoun early adjective 20 cardinal number s proper noun, singular by preposition or subordinating conjunction giving verb, gerund or present participle strength noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction consolation noun, singular or mass to to those determiner who wh-pronoun
this determiner representation noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction them personal pronoun , let verb, base form it personal pronoun give verb, non-3rd person singular present you personal pronoun consolation verb, non-3rd person singular present to to consider verb, base form that determiner , to to have verb, base form conducted verb, past participle
church noun, singular or mass , because preposition or subordinating conjunction i personal pronoun saw verb, past tense that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner souls noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction purgatory adjective in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner churches noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present in preposition or subordinating conjunction constant adjective consolation noun, singular or mass
was verb, past tense a determiner wee noun, singular or mass bit noun, singular or mass too adverb intense adjective for preposition or subordinating conjunction seven cardinal number - year noun, singular or mass - old adjective steven proper noun, singular , and coordinating conjunction as preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner consolation noun, singular or mass , my possessive pronoun parents noun, plural gave verb, past tense me personal pronoun
' but coordinating conjunction now adverb my possessive pronoun actions noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present not adverb entirely adverb a determiner consideration noun, singular or mass or coordinating conjunction consolation noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner other adjective person noun, singular or mass . '
support proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction friendly adjective consolation noun, singular or mass , garth proper noun, singular had verb, past tense found verb, past participle in preposition or subordinating conjunction trisha proper noun, singular , who wh-pronoun had verb, past tense not adverb long adverb before preposition or subordinating conjunction survived verb, past participle
introduction noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction in preposition or subordinating conjunction harley proper noun, singular 's possessive ending personal adjective effects noun, plural when wh-adverb suiting verb, gerund or present participle up preposition or subordinating conjunction for preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner mission noun, singular or mass as preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner consolation noun, singular or mass
taken verb, past participle from preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner spanish proper noun, singular in preposition or subordinating conjunction 1655 cardinal number , although preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun was verb, past tense actually adverb taken verb, past participle as preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner consolation noun, singular or mass prize noun, singular or mass
after preposition or subordinating conjunction some determiner additional adjective consolation noun, singular or mass rounds noun, plural to to figure verb, base form out preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner lower adjective, comparative ranks noun, plural , this determiner was verb, past tense the determiner overall adjective
implicitly adverb , matt proper noun, singular is verb, 3rd person singular present asking verb, gerund or present participle for preposition or subordinating conjunction approval noun, singular or mass , he personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present asking verb, gerund or present participle for preposition or subordinating conjunction reassurance noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction he personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present asking verb, gerund or present participle for preposition or subordinating conjunction consolation noun, singular or mass .
he personal pronoun probably adverb felt verb, past tense it personal pronoun was verb, past tense a determiner consolation noun, singular or mass prize noun, singular or mass from preposition or subordinating conjunction marvel proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction his possessive pronoun ego noun, singular or mass wouldn proper noun, singular t proper noun, singular let verb, non-3rd person singular present him personal pronoun
if preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun s proper noun, singular any determiner consolation noun, singular or mass though preposition or subordinating conjunction , jane proper noun, singular seems verb, 3rd person singular present to to have verb, base form most adverb, superlative natural adjective affinity noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner hammer noun, singular or mass

Use "consolation" in a sentence | "consolation" example sentences

How to use "consolation" in a sentence?

  • The greater the artist, the greater the doubt; perfect confidence is granted to the less talented as a consolation prize.
    -Robert Hughes-
  • Profound peace, spiritual consolation, love of God and love of all things in God - this is the sign that you are on this right path.
    -Pope Francis-
  • A hot bath! How exquisite a vespertine pleasure, how luxurious, fervid and flagrant a consolation for the rigours, the austerities, the renunciations of the day.
    -Rose Macaulay-
  • Thanks to my work everything's going well; it's a great consolation.
    -Claude Monet-
  • Man is the only animal who enjoys the consolation of believing in a next life; all other animals enjoy the consolation of not worrying about it.
    -Robert Breault-
  • What mattered to her was that she loved God, whether or not He granted her the consolation and joy of His felt presence.
    -Brian Kolodiejchuk-
  • When I write love songs, people think they're really soppy - but I see love as a consolation for the boredom of life.
    -Martin Gore-
  • The universe doesn't owe us condolence or consolation; it doesn't owe us a nice warm feeling inside.
    -Richard Dawkins-

Definition and meaning of CONSOLATION

What does "consolation mean?"

/ˌkänsəˈlāSH(ə)n/

noun
Something that gives you a better feeling when sad.

What are synonyms of "consolation"?
Some common synonyms of "consolation" are:
  • comfort,
  • solace,
  • sympathy,
  • compassion,
  • pity,
  • commiseration,
  • relief,
  • help,
  • aid,
  • support,
  • cheer,
  • encouragement,
  • reassurance,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.