Caul
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A caul (Template:Lang-la, literally, "head helmet") is a thin, filmy membrane, the amnion, that covers the newborn's mammalhead and face immediately after birth. [1]
Obstetrics
To be "born in the caul" simply means a child is born with part of the amniotic sac or membrane adhered to the head and face. The caul is harmless and is easily removed by the doctor or midwife. A child born in this way is known as a caulbearer. [2]
Being born with a caul is rare, occurring in fewer than 1 in 80,000 births. Though this statistic includes "en-caul" births, which occur more frequently than authentic caul births. Authentic caul births are therefore far more rare.
"En-caul" births, or babies born inside of the intact sac are usually present only in premature babies.[3] The sac balloons out during the birth with the newborn still inside. The "en-caul" birth is not to be confused with an authentic "caul" birth, which involves only a part of the sac being attached to the head and face of the infant.
Midwives are more likely than a medical doctor to know how to remove the caul safely without leaving a scar. Most will inform the mother of the legend of the caulbearer.
Legend
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In medieval times the appearance of a caul on a newborn baby was seen as a sign of good luck.[4] It was considered an omen that the child was destined for greatness. Gathering the caul onto paper was considered an important tradition of childbirth: the midwife would rub a sheet of paper across the baby's head and face, pressing the material of the caul onto the paper. The caul would then be presented to the mother, to be kept as an heirloom. Some Early Modern European traditions linked being born with the caul to the ability to defend fertility and the harvest against the forces of evil, particularly witches and sorcerers.[5]
Over the course of European history, a popular legend developed suggesting that possession of a baby's caul would give its bearer good luck and protect that person from death by drowning. Cauls were therefore highly prized by sailors. Medieval women often sold these cauls to sailors for large sums of money; a caul was regarded as a valuable talisman.[citation needed]
I was born with a caul, which was advertised for sale, in the newspapers, at the low price of fifteen guineas. Whether sea-going people were short of money about that time, or were short of faith and preferred cork jackets, I don't know; all I know is, that there was but one solitary bidding, and that was from an attorney connected with the bill-broking business, who offered two pounds in cash, and the balance in sherry, but declined to be guaranteed from drowning on any higher bargain. Consequently the advertisement was withdrawn at a dead loss ... and ten years afterwards, the caul was put up in a raffle down in our part of the country, to fifty members at half-a-crown a head, the winner to spend five shillings. I was present myself, and I remember to have felt quite uncomfortable and confused, at a part of myself being disposed of in that way. The caul was won, I recollect, by an old lady with a hand-basket.... It is a fact which will be long remembered as remarkable down there, that she was never drowned, but died triumphantly in bed, at ninety-two. (Charles Dickens, David Copperfield, published London 1850.)
In the film Oscar and Lucinda, Oscar is presented, by his estranged father, with the caul that was upon his head at birth. Oscar has a phobia of the ocean and of water in general, linked to the death of his mother when he was a child. He carries this caul with him until he dies, ironically, by drowning.
In the play Gypsy, Mama Rose tells Louise (Gypsy Rose Lee): "You were born with a caul. That means you got powers to read palms and tell fortunes - and wonderful things are gonna happen to you."
Other legends also developed. One popular legend went that a caulbearer would be able to see the future or have dreams that come to pass.
In Croatian and Slovenian lore, a person born with a caul was destined to become either a Kudlak or a Kresnik. In other words, a person so destined to become a Kudlak would already begin a career of evil while still alive—his soul would leave his body at night in animal form and fly through the air to attack people or to magically do other harm to the community he lived in. When he died, he became an undead vampire who was then an even greater threat to the community. But if a person born with a caul became a Kresnik, he became a champion of the community. While he lived, his soul left his body in animal form at night to fight against both living and undead Kudlaks.
The most common portent of good luck in recent centuries is that the baby born with a caul will never drown, the second most common myth is from Scotland and that believes the child will be fey, or psychic. Another British meaning is that the child will travel its entire life and never tire.
Icelandic culture states a child born with a caul was thought to be special, and this means the child will go through life with a faery companion, a shadow familiar known as the Fylgiar. The Fylgiar serves this person, and it is believed that the person also serves the Fylgiar while asleep or when making deliberate astral projections. This faery can be heard in the home of such a person banging and knocking around. Their most disturbing quality is that they warn their human companions of their own deaths, at which time they can be seen. The condition of the Fylgiar at the time of the sighting indicates what sort of death it will be. A mauled faery means a nasty, painful death, while a peaceful one means a calm, painless death. The Fylgiar continues to live on after the human familiar dies, but it is believed that it accompanies its person to Valhalla, the Nordic Land of the Dead, where it remains until the human soul is comfortable and accepting of his or her demise.
Also an important myth hails from ancient Egypt, and that story claims the newborn baby is destined for the cult of Isis, again a mystically inclined fate.
Another myth associated with a caul is featured in the short story, The Scarlet Ibis. When the main character's brother, Doodle, is born in a caul his aunt states that cauls are made of Jesus' nightgown and everyone must respect Doodle as he may become a saint someday.
Also if twins are both born with cauls it meant that they are marked by an angel and their souls are shielded.
Notable people and fictional characters "born in the caul"
- King Zog of Albania
- James Gordon Farrell, Irish author
Grege Maria Morris Born of the Veil Seer, Model, Author, Advanced Visions,Empath, Healer.
- Liberace - pianist, entertainer and performer
- Sigmund Freud[6]
- Sergei Pankejeff, Freud's Wolf-Man
- Gheorghe Hagi, ex-football player and manager
- Twin boys both named Bruno Frye from Dean Koontz's Whispers
- Danny Torrance, fictional character from Stephen King's novel The Shining
- Swedish economist Knut Wicksell
- David Copperfield from Charles Dickens' David Copperfield
- Francie Nolan from Betty Smith's A Tree Grows In Brooklyn
- Alvin Junior from Orson Scott Card's The Tales of Alvin Maker series
- The poet George Gordon, Lord Byron
- Taliesin, from Taliesin, Stephen R. Lawhead's first book of the Pendragon Cycle
- Doodle, from The Scarlet Ibis by James Hurst
- Napoleon Bonaparte
- Milkman from Song of Solomon
- Musician Ian McKaye
- Twin Niles Perry from The Other by Tom Tryon.
- Edwin Booth
- Vee Talbott from Tennessee Williams' Orpheus Descending was born in the caul for which she holds responsible for her visions
- Marie Laveau, New Orleans Voodooienne, from "VooDoo Dreams" by Jewell Parker Rhodes
- Dora Rare from Ami McKay's "The Birth House"
- Peder Seier (Victorious) Hansen from O.E. Rolvaag's Giants in the Earth
- Watley from SOS Titanic by Eve Bunting
- Arn Magnusson from The Road to Jerusalem by Jan Guillou
- Nancy Wake
- Bill Cullen (businessman) Irish businessman
- The Man in Black, from Lost, as seen in the episode titled Across the Sea
- George Formby, Jr was born in the caul and was blind due to it for a few months. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Formby,_Jr.
References
- ^ http://www.thefreedictionary.com/caul
- ^ http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Caulbearer
- ^ Medical College of Wisconsin
- ^ http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,24857363-5001021,00.html
- ^ The story of these so-called benandanti is recounted in Carlo Ginzburg's study The Night Battles: Witchcraft and Agrarian Cults in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1983.
- ^ D.P. Morgalis, Freud and his Mother