Episode notes
In 1726 rural Surrey, a 24-year-old peasant woman appeared to give birth to rabbits, one after another, witnessed by an experienced man-midwife. Britain's most elite medical minds, even the king's own surgeons, treated it as undeniable fact.
This deep dive explores one of history's most spectacular medical hoaxes, the story of Mary Toft. It is less about rabbits than about crushing poverty, the arrogance of early science, and how the belief in maternal impression primed the establishment to be humiliated.
- The theory of maternal impression and John Maubray's monstrous sooterkin that primed doctors to believe
- The real trauma behind it: a severe miscarriage that left her body open to the scheme
- How royal surgeon Nathaniel St. Andre used a flawed floating-lung test while skeptic Cyriacus Ahlers found straw in the drop ...Â