Posthumous birth#Royalty and nobility

{{short description|Birth after the death of a parent}}

{{distinguish|Coffin birth}}

{{Refimprove|date=July 2008}}

A posthumous birth is the birth of a child after the death of a parent.{{cite web |title=Posthumous Child Law and Legal Definition |publisher=USLegal |url=https://definitions.uslegal.com/p/posthumous-child/}} A person born in these circumstances is called a posthumous child or a posthumously born person. Most instances of posthumous birth involve the birth of a child after the death of their father, but the term is also applied to infants delivered shortly after the death of the mother, usually by caesarean section.Christine Quigley, [https://books.google.com/books?id=QbRreZuttqMC&pg=PA181&lpg=PA181 The Corpse: A History], McFarland, 1996, {{ISBN|0-7864-0170-2}}, pages 180 to 181.

Legal implications

Posthumous birth has special implications in law, potentially affecting the child's citizenship and legal rights, inheritance, and order of succession. Legal systems generally include special provisions regarding inheritance by posthumous children and the legal status of such children. For example, Massachusetts law states that a posthumous child is treated as having been living at the death of the parent, meaning that the child receives the same share of the parent's estate as if the child had been born before the parent's death. Most states recognize a posthumous child born within a set time frame, normally 280 to 300 days after the death of the decedent father.{{cite web|first=Amanda|last=Horner|url=https://law.siu.edu/_common/documents/law-journal/articles-2008/fall-2008/7-horner.pdf|title=I consented to do what?: Posthumous children and the consent to parent after-death|work= Southern Illinois University Law Journal|page=1 (157)|date=2008|access-date=16 February 2024}}{{cite web|first=Christopher A.|last=Scharman|url= https://scholarship.law.vanderbilt.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1794&context=vlr|title=Not Without My Father: The Legal Status of the Posthumously Conceived Child|work=Vanderbilt Law Review / Volume 55 / Issue 3 / Article 5 |date=April 2002|page=10 (1009)|access-date=16 February 2024}}

Another emerging legal issue in the United States is the control of genetic material after the death of the donor.{{cite web |title=Frozen in Time: Planning for the Posthumously Conceived Child |url= http://www.natlawreview.com/article/frozen-time-planning-posthumously-conceived-child|publisher=Fairfield and Woods P.C. |work=The National Law Review|date=9 July 2009|access-date=7 April 2012}} United States law holds that posthumous children of U.S. citizens who are born outside the United States have the same rights to citizenship that they would have had if the deceased U.S. citizen parent had been alive at the time of their birth.{{cite web |url=https://fam.state.gov/FAM/08FAM/08FAM030404.html |title=U.S. Department of State Foreign Affairs Manual Volume 8, 8 FAM 304.4 Posthumous Children |access-date=18 July 2018}} In the field of assisted reproduction, snowflake children, i.e. those "adopted" as frozen embryos by people unrelated to them, can result in the birth of a child after the death of one or both of their genetic parents.

=In monarchies and nobilities=

A posthumous birth has special significance in the case of hereditary monarchies and hereditary noble titles following primogeniture. In this system, a monarch's or peer's own child precedes that monarch's or peer's sibling in the order of succession. In cases where the widow of a childless king or nobleman is pregnant at the time of his death, the next-in-line is not permitted to assume the throne or title,{{cn|date=September 2014}} but must yield place to the unborn child, or ascends and reigns (in the case of a monarch) or succeeds (in the case of a peer) until the child is born (see Alfonso XIII, Charles Edward, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha or John Pelham, 9th Earl of Chichester).{{cn|date=September 2014}}

In monarchies and noble titles that follow male-preference cognatic primogeniture, the situation is similar where the dead monarch or peer was not childless but left a daughter as the next-in-line, as well as a pregnant widow. A posthumous brother would supplant that daughter in the succession, whereas a posthumous sister, being younger, would not. Similarly, in monarchies and noble titles that follow agnatic primogeniture, the sex of the unborn child determines the succession; a posthumous male child would himself succeed, whereas the next-in-line would succeed upon the birth of a posthumous female child.

=Modern complications=

Posthumous conception by artificial insemination or in vitro fertilization, whether done using sperm or ova stored before a parent's death or sperm retrieved from a man's corpse, has created new legal issues.Renee H. Sekino, [http://www.bu.edu/law/scitech/volume8/Sekino.pdf Posthumous Conception: The Birth of a New Class] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040715174044/http://www.bu.edu/law/scitech/volume8/Sekino.pdf |date=15 July 2004 }}, Boston University Journal of Sci. and Tech. Law, 2001. When a woman is inseminated with her deceased husband's sperm, laws that establish that a sperm donor is not the legal father of the child born as a result of artificial insemination have had the effect of excluding the deceased husband from fatherhood and making the child legally fatherless.{{cite web |url=http://www.lawlink.nsw.gov.au/lrc.nsf/pages/R49CHP12 |title=Report 49 (1986) — Artificial Conception: Human Artificial Insemination, 12. AIH and Posthumous Use of Semen |publisher=Law Reform Commission, New South Wales}}

In the United Kingdom before 2000, birth records of children conceived using a dead man's sperm had to identify the infants as fatherless, but in 2000 the government announced that the law would be changed to allow the deceased father's name to be listed on the birth certificate.{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/895544.stm |title=Posthumous fathers to be recognised |work=BBC News |date=25 August 2000}} In 1986, a New South Wales legal reform commission recommended that the law should recognize the deceased husband as the father of a child born from post-mortem artificial insemination, provided that the woman is his widow and unmarried at the time of birth, but the child should have inheritance rights to the father's estate only if the father left a will that included specific provisions for the child.

In 2001, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court was asked to consider whether the father's name should appear on the birth record for a child conceived through artificial insemination after her father's death, as well as whether that child was eligible for U.S. Social Security benefits. The court ruled in January 2002 that a child could be the legal heir of a dead parent if there was a genetic relationship and the deceased parent had both agreed to the posthumous conception and committed to support the child. Different U.S. state courts and federal appellate courts have ruled differently in similar cases. In 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Astrue v. Capato that twins born 18 months after their father's death using the father's frozen sperm were not eligible for Social Security benefits, which set a new precedent.

Naming

In the Middle Ages, it was traditional for posthumous children born in England to be given a matronymic surname instead of a patronymic one. This may in part explain why matronyms are more common in England than in other parts of Europe.Bowman, William Dodgson. The Story of Surnames. London, George Routledge & Sons, Ltd., 1932. No ISBN.

In Ancient Rome, posthumous children of noble birth were often given the cognomen (or third name) 'Postumus'. One example is Agrippa Postumus.

In Yoruba culture, posthumous children are given names that refer to the circumstances concerning the birth. Examples of this include Bàbárímisá, meaning that the Father saw (the child) and ran; Yeyérínsá, meaning that the mother saw (the child) and ran; Ikúdáyísí (or any name with the root dáyísí), which means that death spared the child; and Ẹnúyàmí, meaning that "I was surprised", referring to the fact that the tragic death of the father, mother, or both was sudden and surprising for the family.

Notable people born posthumously

=Antiquity=

class="wikitable sortable"

!Name

!Born

!Late parent

!Parent died

!Gap

!Cause of parent's death

Bindusara
{{small|Mauryan Emperor}}
320 BCEDurdhara
{{small|Mauryan Empress}}
320 BCESame dayPoisoning. He was delivered through caesarean section.Lurie S (2005). "The changing motives of cesarean section: from the ancient world to the twenty-first century". Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics. 271 (4): 281–285. doi:10.1007/s00404-005-0724-4. {{PMID|15856269}}.
Alexander IV
{{small|King of Macedon}}
August 323 BCEAlexander the Great
{{small|King of Macedon}}
11 June 323 BCE{{ntsh|60}}2 monthsDisease.
Cornelia Postuma77 BCELucius Cornelius Sulla Felix
{{small|Roman dictator}}
78 BCEDisease, possibly related to chronic alcoholic abuse.
Agrippa Postumus
{{small|Grandson of Augustus Caesar}}
12 BCEMarcus Vipsanius Agrippa
{{small|Roman general and statesman}}
12 BCEA few weeksDisease.
Shapur II
{{small|Sasanian Emperor}}
309 ADHormizd II
{{small|Sasanian Emperor}}
309 AD40 daysAssassination. Shapur is said to be the only monarch in history who was crowned in utero.
{{nowrap|Flavia Maxima Constantia}}
{{small|Roman Empress}}
1 January 362Constantius II
{{small|Roman Emperor}}
3 November 3611 month, 29 daysFever.

=Middle Ages=

class="wikitable sortable"

!Name

!Born

!Late parent

!Parent died

!Gap

!Cause of parent's death

Muhammad
{{small|Prophet of Islam}}
570Abdullah ibn Abdul-Muttalib
{{small|Arab trader}}
569{{ntsh|180}}<6 monthsDisease while returning from a trade mission in Medina.
Umm Kulthum bint Abi Bakr
{{small|Early Muslim scholar}}
634Abu Bakr al-Siddiq
{{small|Caliph}}
23 August 634{{ntsh|180}}<3 monthsOn 23 August 634, Abu Bakr fell sick and did not recover. He developed a high fever and was confined to bed. His illness was prolonged, and when his condition worsened, he died in Medina.
Constantine
{{small|Byzantine prince}}
1 January 798Constantine VI
{{small| Byzantine Emperor}}
19 April 7978 months, 13 daysDied of wounds after being blinded by his mother, Irene, who proclaimed herself Empress.
Robert I
{{small|King of France}}
15 August 866Robert the Strong
{{small| Count of Anjou}}
2 July 8661 month, 13 daysKilled at the Battle of Brissarthe.
Charles the Simple
{{small|King of France}}
17 September 879Louis the Stammerer
{{small|King of France}}
10 April 879{{ntsh|161}}5 months, 7 daysDisease contracted during a campaign against the Vikings.
Al-Mustakfi
{{small|Abbasid caliph}}{{EI2 | last = Bosworth | first = C. E. | authorlink = C. E. Bosworth | title = al-Mustakfī |doi=10.1163/1573-3912_islam_SIM_5621 | volume = 7 | pages = 723–724 }}{{cite book | first = Harold | last = Bowen | title = The Life and Times of ʿAlí Ibn ʿÍsà: The Good Vizier | year = 1928 | location = Cambridge | publisher = Cambridge University Press |url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.499033 | oclc = 386849 |pp=384–385}}
11 November 908al-Muktafi
{{small|Abbasid caliph}}
13 August 908{{ntsh|161}}3 months, 2 daysUnspecified illness.
Ulf

|1067

|Harold Godwinson

King of England

|14 October 1066

|

|Killed in the Battle of Hastings

Lothair III
{{small|Holy Roman Emperor}}
1075Gebhard of Supplinburg
{{small|Saxon count}}
9 June 1075Killed at the Battle of Langensalza.
Henry II
{{small|Margrave of Meissen}}
1103Henry I, Margrave of the Saxon Ostmark1103
Saint Drogo
{{small|Flemish saint}}
14 March 1105His mother died in childbirth, leaving him orphan from birth
Valdemar I
{{small|King of Denmark}}
14 January 1131Canute Lavard
{{small|Duke of Schleswig}}
7 January 11317 daysMurdered by Magnus the Strong.
Raymond II of Turenne
{{small|Viscount of Turenne}}
1143Boson II of Turenne
{{small|Viscount of Turenne}}
11434 months
Constance I
{{small|Queen of Sicily}}
2 November 1154Roger II
{{small|King of Sicily and Africa}}
26 February 11548 months, 5 days
Baldwin V
{{small|King of Jerusalem}}
August 1177William of Montferrat
{{small|Count of Jaffa and Ascalon}}
June 1177{{ntsh|60}}2 monthsPossibly malaria.
Arthur I
{{small|Duke of Brittany}}
29 March 1187Geoffrey II
{{small|Duke of Brittany}}
19 August 1186{{ntsh|222}}7 months, 10 daysDisputed. One source claims he was trampled to death in a joust, other that he died of a sudden chest affliction.
Maria of Montferrat
{{small|Queen of Jerusalem}}
Summer 1192Conrad of Montferrat
{{small|King of Jerusalem}}
28 April 1192A few monthsAssassination.
Theobald I
{{small|King of Navarre}}
30 May 1201Theobald III
{{small|Count of Champagne}}
24 May 1201{{ntsh|6}}6 days
Raymond Nonnatus
{{small|Catholic saint}}
1204His mother1204{{ntsh|0}} Same dayChildbirth. He was retrieved through caesarean section afterward.
Haakon IV

King of Norway

|March/April 1204

|Haakon III

King of Norway

|1 January 1204

|2-3 month

|Illness after a bloodletting, suspicion of poisoning by Margaret of Sweden, Queen of Norway

Walter IV
{{small|Count of Brienne}}
1205Walter III
{{small|Count of Brienne}}
14 June 1205Killed in battle.
Erik Eriksson

King of Sweden

|1216

|Erik Knutsson

King of Sweden

|10 April 1216

|

|Natural causes,said to be a fever.

Charles I
{{small|King of Sicily}}
early 1227Louis VIII
{{small|King of France}}
8 November 1226??Dysentery.
Stephen the Posthumous
{{small|Hungarian prince}}
1236Andrew II
{{small|King of Hungary and Croatia}}
21 September 1235{{ntsh|133}}at least 2 months
Robert II
{{small|Count of Artois}}
September 1250Robert I
{{small|Count of Artois}}
8 February 12507 monthsKilled in battle.
Przemysł II
{{small|King of Poland}}
14 October 1257Przemysł I
{{small|Duke of Greater Poland}}
4 June 1257{{ntsh|133}}4 months, 10 days
Władysław of Legnica
{{small|Duke of Legnica}}
6 June 1296Henry V, Duke of Legnica
{{small|Duke of Legnica}}
22 February 12964 monthsIllness following imprisonment.
John I
{{small|King of France and Navarre}}
15 November 1316Louis X
{{small|King of France and Navarre}}
5 June 1316{{ntsh|163}}5 months, 10 daysPneumonia or pleurisy from drinking excess cooled wine after a real tennis match.
Isabel de Verdun
{{small|Baroness Ferrers de Groby}}
21 March 1317Theobald de Verdun
{{small|Justiciar of Ireland}}
27 July 13167 months, 22 daysTyphoid.
Maria of Calabria
{{small|Latin Empress consort of Constantinople}}
6 May 1329Charles
{{small|Duke of Calabria}}
9 November 13285 months, 27 days
John, 3rd Earl of Kent7 April 1330Edmund of Woodstock
{{small|English prince}}
19 March 1330{{ntsh|19}}19 daysExecuted for treason against his nephew, Edward III of England.
Charles Martel, Duke of Calabria25 December 1345Andrew, Duke of Calabria18 September 13453 months
Joan of FranceMay 1351Philip VI
{{small|King of France and Navarre}}
22 August 13509 months
Gerhard VII, Count of Holstein-Rendsburg

Duke of Schleswig, Count of Holstein

|1404

|Gerhard VI, Count of Holstein-Rendsburg

|4 August 1404

|

|Killed in the Battle on the Hamme

William of Bavaria-Munich1435William III
{{small|Duke of Bavaria}}
12 September 1435{{ntsh|90}}up to 3 months
Joan of Portugal
{{small|Consort queen of Castile}}
31 March 1439Edward, King of Portugal9 September 14386 months, 22 daysPlague.
Ladislaus VI
{{small|King of Hungary, Bohemia and Archduke of Austria}}
22 February 1440Albert II
{{small|King of Germany, Bohemia and Hungary}}
27 October 1439{{ntsh|118}}3 months, 23 days
Enrique de Aragón y Pimentel
{{small|Count of Ampurias}}
25 July 1445Henry, Duke of Villena
{{small|Count of Ampurias}}
15 June 14451 month
Henry VII
{{small|King of England}}
28 January 1457Edmund Tudor
{{small|Earl of Richmond}}
1 or 3 November 1456{{ntsh|88}}2 months, 25 daysBubonic plague.
John Louis
{{small|Count of Nassau-Saarbrücken}}
19 October 1472John II
{{small|Duke of Nassau-Saarbrücken}}
15 July 1472{{ntsh|96}}3 months, 4 days
James II
{{small|King of Cyprus }}
6 August 1473James II
{{small|King of Cyprus}}
10 July 14731 month
Mencía PachecoFranco Silva, A. (2009) "Las mujeres de Juan Pacheco y su parentela." Historia, Instituciones, Documentos. Vol. 36, pgs. 161-182
{{small|Castilian noblewoman}}
1474–1475Juan Pacheco
{{small|Marquis of Villena}}
1 October 1474Throat ailment.
Clement VII
{{small|Pope of the Catholic Church}}
26 May 1478Giuliano de' Medici
{{small|Ruler of the Florentine Republic}}
26 April 1478{{ntsh|30}}1 monthAssassination in the Pazzi Conspiracy.

=16th–18th centuries=

class="wikitable sortable"

!Name

!Born

!Late parent

!Parent died

!Gap

!Cause of parent's death

Catherine of Austria
{{small|Consort queen of Portugal}}
14 January 1507Philip I
{{small|King of Castile and Duke of Burgundy}}
25 September 15063 months, 18 daysTyphoid or poison.
Alexander Stewart
{{small|Duke of Ross}}
30 April 1514James IV
{{small|King of Scotland}}
9 September 1513{{ntsh|223}}7 months, 21 daysKilled at the Battle of Flodden.
Görvel Fadersdotter Sparre

Swedish noblewoman

|1517

|Fader Nilsson (Sparre)

|1515

|

|

Wenceslaus III Adam
{{small|Duke of Cieszyn}}
December 1524Wenceslaus II
{{small|Duke of Cieszyn}}
17 November 15241 month
Henry Berkeley
{{small|Baron Berkeley}}
26 November 1534Thomas Berkeley
{{small|Baron Berkeley}}
19 September 15349 weeks, 4 days
Duarte
{{small|Duke of Guimarães}}
March 1541Duarte
{{small|Duke of Guimarães}}
20 September 15407 months
Françoise d'Orléans-Longueville
{{small|Wife of Louis I of Bourbon}}
5 April 1549François d'Orléans
{{small|French nobleman}}
25 October 1548{{ntsh|162}}5 months, 8 days
Sebastian
{{small|King of Portugal}}
20 January 1554João Manuel
{{small|Prince of Portugal}}
2 January 1554{{ntsh|18}}18 daysTuberculosis or diabetes.
Maria of Hanau-Münzenberg20 January 1562Philipp III
{{small|Count of Hanau-Münzenberg}}
14 November 15612 months, 6 days
Jaroslav II Bořita of Martinice6 January 1582Jaroslav I. Bořita of Martinice1581

|

|Accident.

Ben Jonson
{{small|Elizabethan playwright}}
c. 11 June 1572His fatherApril 1572{{ntsh|60}}1–2 months
Henry II
{{small|Prince of Condé}}
1 September 1588Henry I
{{small|Prince of Condé}}
5 Mar 15885 months, 23 daysDisease.
Charles of Austria
{{small|Bishop of Wroclaw}}
7 August 1590Charles II
{{small|Archduke of Austria}}
10 July 159028 days
Bengt Oxenstierna

Swedish statesman

|19 October 1591

|Bengt Gabrielsson Oxenstierna

|15 April 1591

|

|

Toyotomi Sadako
{{small|Wife of Kugyō Kujō Yukiie }}
1592Toyotomi Hidekatsu14 October 1592Killed in Korean Campaign.
Sveinn "Skotti" Björnsson
{{small|Icelandic criminal}}
1596–1597Björn Pétursson
{{small|Only Icelandic serial killer}}
1596Executed for murder.
Thomas Herbert
{{small|Welsh seaman and author}}
15 May 1597Richard Herbert
{{small|Justice of the Peace and Member of Parliament}}
15 October 1596 (buried)7 months
Christopher Vasa

{{Small|Prince of Poland, Lithuania and Sweden}}

|10 February 1598

|Anne of Austria

|10 February 1598

|Same day

|Disease

Friedrich Wilhelm II
{{small|Duke of Saxe-Altenburg}}
12 February 1603Friedrich Wilhelm I
{{small|Duke of Saxe-Weimar}}
7 July 1602{{ntsh|221}}7 months, 5 days
Joseph of Cupertino
{{small|Catholic saint}}
17 June 1603Felice Desa
{{small|Apulian carpenter}}Catholic Encyclopedia
Abraham Cowley
{{small|English poet}}
1618His father
Elizabeth Gyllenhielm
{{small|Swedish noblewoman}}
1622Charles Philip
{{small|Duke of Södermanland}}
25 January 1622Disease during the 1622 siege of Narva.
Nils Brahe the younger

|8 April 1533

|Nils Brahe the Elder

|21 November 1632

|

|Wounded in the Battle of Lützen

François-Henri de Montmorency
{{small|Duke of Luxembourg}}
8 January 1628François de Montmorency-Bouteville
{{small|Duke of Luxembourg}}
22 June 1627{{ntsh|201}}6 months, 15 daysExecuted for dueling.
Isaac Newton
{{small|English scientist}}
4 January 1643Isaac Newton, Sr.
{{small|English farmer}}
October 1642{{ntsh|105}}3 months
Gulielma Penn
{{small|wife of William Penn, founder of Pennsylvania}}
February 1644Sir William Springett
{{small|English Parliamentarian army officer}}
3 February 1644a few daysFever following Siege of Arundel.
Elisabeth Dorothea Wrangel

|1644

|Herman Wrangel

Governor of Livonia

|10 December 1643

|

|

Georg Albrecht II.

|26 Februar 1648

|Georg Albrecht I.

Count of Erbach

|25 November 1647

|

|

William III
{{small|Stadholder of the Dutch Republic, King of England and Scotland}}
14 November 1650William II
{{small|Stadtholder of the Dutch Republic}}
6 November 1650{{ntsh|8}}8 daysSmallpox.
Robert Molesworth
{{small|Irish politician and writer}}
7 September 1656Robert Molesworth, Sr.3 September 16564 days
Adolphus Frederick II
{{small|Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz}}
19 October 1658Adolphus Frederick I
{{small|Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin}}
27 February 1658{{ntsh|235}}7 months, 21 days
Jonathan Swift
{{small|Author of Gulliver's Travels}}
30 November 1667Jonathan Swift, Sr.
{{small|English lawyer in Ireland}}
c. April 1667{{ntsh|210}}7 monthsSyphilis.
William August
{{small|Duke of Saxe-Eisenach}}
30 November 1668Adolf William, Duke of Saxe-Eisenach
{{small|Duke of Saxe-Eisenach}}
21 November 1668{{ntsh|9}}9 days
Thomas Greenhill
{{small|English surgeon}}
1669?William Greenhill
Emmanuel Lebrecht
{{small|Prince of Anhalt-Köthen}}
20 May 1671Emmanuel
{{small|Prince of Anhalt-Köthen}}
8 November 16706 months
Godscall Paleologue
{{small|Last known member of the Paleologus dynasty}}
12 January 1694Theodorious Paleologus
{{small|Barbadian privateer}}
August-December 1693Up to 5 months
Christine Marie Jacqueline Henriette FitzJames
{{small|French nun}}
29 May 1703Henry FitzJames
{{small|Jacobite peer}}
16 December 17025 months, 13 days
Edward Ward, 9th Baron Dudley
{{small|British peer}}
16 June 1704Edward Ward, 8th Baron Dudley28 March 1704{{ntsh|80}}2 months, 15 daysSmallpox.
Frederick Christian
{{small|Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth}}
17 July 1708Christian Henry
{{small|Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach}}
5 April 17083 months, 12 days
{{nowrap|Georg Wilhelm Richmann}}
{{small|Livonian physicist}}
22 July 1711His fatherPlague.
William IV
{{small|Stadholder of the Dutch Republic}}
1 September 1711John William Friso
{{small|Prince of Orange}}
14 July 1711{{ntsh|50}}1 month, 15 daysDrowning in a ferryboat accident.
Robert Petre, 8th Baron Petre
{{small|British peer and horticulturist}}
3 June 1713Robert Petre, 7th Baron Petre22 March 17132 months, 7 daysSmallpox.
Edmund Pendleton
{{small|American politician}}
9 September 1721Henry Pendleton17214 months
John Morton
{{small|American politician}}
1725John Morton, Sr.1724
Sir Brook Bridges, 3rd Baronet
{{small|British politician}}
17 September 1733Sir Brook Bridges, 2nd Baronet23 May 1733{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20080501224809/http://www.leighrayment.com/baronetage/baronetsB5.htm leighrayment, The Baronetage]}}. Retrieved 14 March 20143 months, 22 days
Barbara Herbert
{{small|Countess of Powis}}
24 June 1735Edward Herbert
{{small|British aristocrat}}
c. March 17353 months
Caroline Matilda
{{small|Consort queen of Denmark and Norway}}
11 July 1751Frederick, Prince of Wales20 March 17513 months, 17 daysPulmonary embolism.
Thomas Chatterton
{{small|English poet and forger}}
20 November 1752Thomas Chatterton Sr.
{{small|English poet and musician}}
7 August 1752Wikisource. Retrieved 14 March 20143 months, 13 days
John Hamilton, 1st Marquess of Abercorn
{{small|Irish peer and politician}}
July 1756John Hamilton, Sr.
{{small|Royal Navy officer}}
December 17557 monthsAccidental drowning while on duty.
Magnus Fredrik Brahe

Swedish Lord Marshal

|15 October 1756

|Erik Brahe

Count and politician

|23 July 1756

|3 months

|Execution for treason after the Coup of 1756.

Frederick Ferdinand Constantin
{{small|Prince of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach}}
8 September 1758Ernest Augustus II
{{small|Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach}}
28 May 17583 months
Marie Tussaud
{{small|French wax artist}}
1 December 1761Joseph GrosholtzSep-Oct 17612 months
Elizabeth Simcoe
{{small|British Canadian artist}}
22 September 1762Thomas Gwillim
{{small|Military officer}}
29 January 17627 months, 22 daysKilled or died otherwise in the Seven Years' War.{{cite book |last1=Beacock Fryer |first1=Mary |title=Elizabeth Posthuma Simcoe 1762-1850. A Biography |date=1989 |publisher=Dundurn |location=Toronto, London |pages=10–12}}
Benedict Joseph Flaget
{{small|French American bishop}}
7 November 1763His father[http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06093a.htm Catholic Encyclopedia]
Andrew Jackson
{{small|7th President of the United States}}
15 March 1767Andrew Jackson, Sr.
{{small|Irish American colonist}}
c. 23 February 1767Around 21 daysLogging accident.
Lord William Russell
{{small|British politician}}
20 August 1767Francis Russell
{{small|Marquess of Tavistock}}
22 March 17675 monthsFall from horse.
Sawai Madhavrao
{{small|12th Peshwa of the Maratha Empire}}
18 April 1774Narayan Rao
{{small|10th Peshwa of the Maratha Empire}}
30 August, 17737 monthsMurder.
Tenskwatawa
{{small|Shawnee prophet and leader}}
January 1775Puckenshinwa
{{small|Leader of the Kispokotha division of the Shawnee tribe}}
October 10, 17743-4 monthsKilled at the Battle of Point Pleasant.
Henry Howard
{{small|Earl of Suffolk}}
8 August 1779Henry Howard
{{small|Earl of Suffolk}}
7 March 17795 months, 1 day

=19th century=

class="wikitable sortable"

!Name

!Born

!Late parent

!Parent died

!Gap

!Cause of parent's death

Lord George Hill
{{small|British politician}}
9 December 1801Arthur Hill, 2nd Marquess of Downshire7 September 18013 months, 2 daysSuicide.
Louis Augustus Karl Frederick Emil
{{small|Duke of Anhalt-Köthen}}
20 September 1802Louis
{{small|Prince of Anhalt-Köthen}}
16 September 18024 days
William Holland Thomas
{{small|American merchant, lawyer, politician, soldier.}}
5 February 1805Richard Thomas??????
Sir George Grey
{{small|British soldier, explorer, governor}}
14 April 1812Lt-Col George GreyEarly April 1812a few daysKilled at the Battle of Badajoz.
Arthur MacArthur Sr.
{{small|Governor of Wisconsin and grandfather of Douglas MacArthur}}
26 January 1815Arthur MacArthur I19 January 18157 days
François Sabatier-Ungher
{{small|French philanthropist}}
2 July 1818His fathershortly before??
Charles de La Roche30 March 1820rowspan=4|Charles Ferdinand
{{small|Duke of Berry}}
rowspan=4|14 February 18201 month, 16 daysrowspan=4|Assassination by a Bonapartist. Each child was born to a different mother.
Alix Mélanie Cosnefroy de Saint-Ange16 September 18207 months, 2 days
Henri, Count of Chambord
{{small|Legitimist pretender to the French throne}}
29 September 18207 months, 15 days
Ferdinand Oreille de Carrière10 October 18207 months, 25 days
Rutherford B. Hayes
{{small|19th President of the United States}}
4 October 1822Rutherford Hayes, Jr.
{{small|American storekeeper}}
20 July 18221 month, 22 days
Jemima Blackburn
{{small|Scottish painter}}
1 May 1823James Wedderburn
{{small|Solicitor General for Scotland}}
7 November 18225 months, 23 days
Anna Leonowens
{{small|British teacher co-subject of The King and I}}
5 November 1831Thomas Edwards
{{small|East India Company officer}}
c. August 18313 months
Henry B. Wheatley
{{small|English author, editor and indexer}}
1838Benjamin Wheatley
{{small|Auctioneer}}
David Hyrum Smith
{{small|Leader of the RLDS Church}}
7 November 1844Joseph Smith
{{small|Founder of the Latter Day Saint movement}}
27 June 18444 months, 9 daysLynching while awaiting trial in jail.
Tokugawa Iemochi
{{small|14th shogun of Tokugawa shogunate }}
17 July 1846Tokugawa Nariyuki
{{small|Lord of Wakayama Domain}}
1 June 18461 month, 16 days
Chikako, Princess Kazu
{{small|Wife of Tokugawa Iemochi}}
1 August 1846Ninkō
{{small|Emperor of Japan}}
21 February 18465 months, 9 days
Horace Tabberer Brown
{{small|British chemist}}
20 July 1848His father
Helena Hedvig Klinckowström

|30 september 1850

|Otto Wilhelm Klinckowström

|27 January 1850

|

|

Henry Waldegrave, 11th Earl Waldegrave
{{small|British minister and noble}}
14 October 1854William Waldegrave, Viscount Chewton8 October 18546 daysWounds from the Battle of the Alma.
Katherine Harley
{{small|British suffragist}}
3 May 1855John Tracy William French
{{small|Royal Navy officer}}
1854
John Norton
{{small|English-Australian journalist}}
25 January 1857John Norton
{{small|Stonemason}}
Samuel Alexander
{{small|British philosopher}}
6 January 1859Samuel Alexander, Sr.
{{small|Australian saddler}}
Motilal Nehru
{{small|36th and 47th President of the Indian National Congress}}
6 May 1861Gangadhar Nehru
{{small|Last Kotwal of Delhi}}
4 February 18613 months, 2 days
Florence Maybrick
{{small|British-American convicted murderess}}
3 September 1862William George Chandler
{{small|Banker and Mayor of Mobile}}
Breaker Morant
{{small|Australian soldier and folk hero}}
9 December 1864Edwin Murrant
{{small|English workhouse master}}
August 18644 months
William George
{{small|Welsh solicitor}}
23 February 1865William George
{{small|Welsh schoolteacher}}
June 18648 monthspneumonia
Frank Anstey
{{small|Australian politician}}
18 August 1865Samuel Anstey
{{small|English iron miner}}
c. March 18655 months
Rua Kenana Hepetipa
{{small|Maori prophet, faith healer, and activist}}
1869Kenana TumoanaNovember 1868Killed in Te Kooti's War.
George Washington Lambert
{{small|Australian artist}}
13 September 1873George Washington Lambert, Sr.25 July 18731 month, 16 days
William Lionel Hichens
{{small|English industrialist}}
1 May 1874John Ley Hichens
{{small|English physician & army surgeon}}
Rudolf Besier
Dutch/English dramatist
2 July 1878Rudolf Besier, Sr.c. January 1878c. 6 months
Carl Schuricht
{{small|German conductor}}
3 July 1880Carl Conrad SchurichtJune 1880c. 21 daysDrowned in the Baltic Sea while trying to save a friend.
Charles Edward
{{small|Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha}}
19 July 1884Leopold, Duke of Albany
{{small|British prince}}
28 March 18843 months, 18 daysHaemophilia-related intracerebral hemorrhage after a fall.
Chester W. Nimitz
{{small|American fleet admiral}}
24 February 1885Chester Bernard Nimitz14 August 18846 months, 10 days
Abd al-Rahman al-Mahdi
{{small|Sudanese Imam of the Ansar, first Chief Minister of Sudan}}
15 July 1885Muhammad Ahmad
{{small|Sudanese self-proclaimed Mahdi}}
22 June 188523 daysTyphus.
Clara Sipprell
{{small|Canadian-American photographer}}
31 October 1885Francis Sipprell
Alfonso XIII
{{small|King of Spain}}
17 May 1886Alfonso XII
{{small|King of Spain}}
25 November 18855 months, 21 daysDysentery worsened by tuberculosis.
Li Dazhao
{{small|Co-founder of the Chinese Communist Party}}
29 October 1889His fatherA few months
Manuel Roxas
{{small|President of the Philippines}}
1 January 1892Gerardo Roxas y Arroyo21 April 18918 months, 11 daysKilled by the Civil Guard
Charles Wilfred Orr
English song composer
31 July 1893His father
Thomas Iorwerth Ellis
{{small|Welsh classicist}}
19 December 1899Thomas Edward Ellis
{{small|Welsh politician}}
5 April 18998 months, 14 days
Mabel Mercer
{{small|British-American jazz singer}}
3 February 1900Her father

=20th century=

class="wikitable sortable"

!Name

!Born

!Late parent

!Parent died

!Gap

!Cause of parent's death

Stanley Kunitz
{{small|American poet}}
29 July 1905Solomon Z. Kunitz
{{small|Immigrant Russian Jewish dressmaker}}
June 19056 weeksSuicide by drinking carbolic acid after going bankrupt.
Johan Kjær Hansen
{{small|Danish Resistance fighter}}
7 April 1907Hans Christian Johan Andreas Hansen
{{small|Bicycle manufacturer}}
13 December 19063 months, 22 days
Xiao Qian
{{small|Chinese essayist and translator}}
27 January 1910His father
John Jacob Astor VI
{{small|American shipping businessman}}
14 August 1912John Jacob Astor IV
{{small|American businessman}}
15 April 19123 months, 28 daysSinking of the RMS Titanic.
Raoul Wallenberg
{{small|Swedish diplomat and humanitarian}}
14 August 1912Raoul Oscar Wallenberg
{{small|Swedish Navy officer}}
May 19123 monthsCancer.
Red Skelton
{{small|American comedian}}
18 July 1913Joseph Elmer Skelton
{{small|Grocer and former circus clown}}
May 19132 months
Cäzilia Gabriel
{{small|Hinterkaifeck victim}}
January 1915Karl Gabriel
{{small|German soldier}}
December 19141 monthKilled in World War I.
Georg Quistgaard
{{small|Danish Resistance fighter}}
19 February 1915Georg Brockhoff Quistgaard
{{small|Danish secretary}}
18 December 19142 months, 1 day
Fred Ball

|17 July 1915

|Henry Durell Ball

Telephone lineman

|February 28, 1915

|139 days

|Died of typhoid fever.

Alfred Shaughnessy
{{small|English screenwriter and producer}}
19 May 1916Thomas Alfred Shaughnessy
{{small|Canadian Army officer}}
31 March 191650 daysKilled in World War I.
Mihrişah Sultan
{{small|Ottoman princess}}
1 June 1916Yusuf Izzeddin
{{small|Ottoman Crown Prince}}
1 February 19164 monthsSuicide.
Ronald R. Van Stockum
{{small|Brigadier General of the U.S. Marines}}
8 July 1916Reginald George Bareham
{{small|British soldier}}
1 July 19161 weekKilled in World War I Battle of the Somme.
Edward Bell, Jr.
{{small|Squadron Leader of the Royal Air Force}}
October 1918Edward Bell, Sr.
{{small|Commander of the Football Battalion}}
24 March 19186 monthsKilled in World War I.
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
{{small|Russian novelist}}
11 December 1918Isaakiy Semyonovich Solzhenitsyn
{{small|Imperial Russian Army officer}}
15 June 19185 months, 25 daysHunting accident.
Lawrence Ferlinghetti
{{small|American poet}}
24 March 1919Carlo Ferlinghetti
{{small|Italian immigrant}}
Heart attack.
John Mitchum
{{small|American actor}}
6 September 1919James Thomas MitchumFebruary 19197 monthsRailyard accident.
Jehanne Rosemary Ernestine Beaumont7 September 1919Dudley Beaumont
{{small|British Army officer}}
24 November 19189 monthsSpanish flu.
Kung Te-cheng
{{small|Last Duke Yansheng}}
23 February 1920Kong Lingyi
{{small|Duke Yansheng}}
8 November 19193 months, 15 days
Alexandra
{{small|Last queen consort of Yugoslavia}}
25 March 1921Alexander
{{small|King of Greece}}
25 October 19205 monthsSepsis from a captive Barbary macaque's bite.
Jules Olitski
{{small|Ukrainian-American painter, sculptor}}
27 March 1922Jevel DemikovskyNew York Magazine (1 Oct 1973), Vol. 6, Nº 40, pg. 76
{{small|Soviet Commissar}}
A few monthsExecution.
Elisabeth of Austria
{{small|Member of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine}}
31 May 1922Charles I
{{small|Last Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary}}
1 April 19221 month, 30 daysPneumonia.
Stephen Wurm
{{small|Hungarian-Australian linguist}}
19 August 1922Adolphe Wurm
Mary Warnock
{{small|English philosopher}}
14 April 1924Archibald Edward Wilson
{{small|Teacher at Winchester College}}
1923
Anthony Earnshaw
{{small|English anarchist}}
9 October 1924His father
Felipe Rodríguez
{{small|Puerto Rican singer}}
8 May 1926His father
Earl Holliman
{{small|American actor}}
11 September 1928William A. Frost
{{small|American farmer}}
6 months{{cite news |date=October 5, 1991 |title=Veteran Holliman returns to TV |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/27712667/veteranhollimanreturnstotvpsilu/ |newspaper=Quad-City Times |page=2B |via=Newspapers.com |agency=New York Times}}
Zhu Rongji
{{small|Former premier of China}}
23 October 1928Zhu Kuanshu
{{small|16th grandson of Hongwu Emperor}}
Bertram Wainer
{{small|Australian doctor and activist}}
30 December 1928His father
Itamar Franco
{{small|33rd President of Brazil}}
28 June 1930Augusto César Stiebler FrancoApril 19302 monthsMalaria.[http://noticias.uol.com.br/politica/ultimas-noticias/2011/07/03/corpo-de-itamar-franco-chega-a-juiz-de-fora-mg-onde-sera-velado.htm Corpo de Itamar Franco chega a Juiz de Fora (MG), onde será velado] UOL (In Portuguese), 3 July 2011, accessed in 29 November 2016.
Thomas Sowell
{{small|American economist}}
30 June 1930His father
Brian Sewell
{{small|British art critic}}
15 July 1931Peter Warlock
{{small|British composer and music critic}}
{{small|(claimed by Sewell)}}
17 December 19306 months, 26 daysCoal gas poisoning.
Don Durant
{{small|American actor}}
20 November 1932His fatherSeptember-October 19322 monthsTruck accident.
Saddam Hussein
{{small|Iraqi dictator}}
28 April 1937Hussein Abd Al-MajidCancer.
Ian Brady
{{small|British serial killer}}
2 January 1938His father
{{small|(according to his mother)}}
3 monthsUnknown. Brady's father was never identified, casting doubt on his mother's claims.
Lee Harvey Oswald
{{small|Assassin of John F. Kennedy}}
18 October 1939Robert Edward Lee Oswald
{{small|Army veteran of WWI}}
19 August 19391 month, 28 daysHeart attack.
Jacques Mairesse
{{small|French economist}}
16 August 1940Jacques Mairesse, Sr.
{{small|French footballer}}
13 June 19402 months, 3 daysKilled while trying to escape a prisoner-of-war camp during the Battle of France.
Edwin Wilson
{{small|Australian poet}}
27 October 1942His father
Henry and David Cecil
{{small|British twin racehorse trainers}}
11 January 1943Henry Kerr Auchmuty Cecil
{{small|Parachute Regiment officer}}
30 November – 2 December 19421 month, 1–2 daysKilled in the North African campaign of World War II.{{cite news|url= https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2013/jun/11/sir-henry-cecil |work= The Guardian |first= Julian |last= Wilson |title= Sir Henry Cecil obituary |date= 11 June 2013 |access-date= 5 July 2015}}
Sylvester McCoy
{{small|British actor and comedian}}
20 August 1943Percy Kent-Smith18 July 19431 month, 2 daysKilled in World War II.
Ranulph Fiennes
{{small|British explorer and writer}}
7 March 1944Ranulph Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes
{{small|Royal Scots Greys commander}}
24 November 19433 months, 12 daysKilled by landmine in Italy while serving in World War II.{{Cite news|last=Jinman|first=Richard|date=19 February 2019|title=Sir Ranulph Fiennes on rivalry, pain and the storage of amputated fingers|work=Sydney Morning Herald|url=https://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/sir-ranulph-fiennes-on-rivalry-pain-and-the-storage-of-amputated-fingers-20190218-h1be6y.html|access-date=4 August 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190222153049/https://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/sir-ranulph-fiennes-on-rivalry-pain-and-the-storage-of-amputated-fingers-20190218-h1be6y.html|archive-date=22 February 2019}}
John Pelham
{{small|Earl of Chichester}}
14 April 1944John Pelham, Sr.
{{small|British diplomat and Captain of the Scots Guards}}
21 February 19441 month, 22 daysKilled in a road accident while serving in World War II.
Maria João Pires
{{small|Portuguese-Swiss classical pianist}}
23 July 1944João Baptista Pires1 July 194422 days
Bernard Collaery
{{small|Australian lawyer and politician}}
12 October 1944Edward Francis Collaery
{{small|RAAF flying officer}}
29 June 19443 months 13 daysKilled in World War II.
Edward Foljambe
{{small|Earl of Liverpool}}
14 November 1944Peter George William Savile Foljambe2 September 19442 months, 12 daysKilled in World War II.
Joachim
{{small|8th Prince Murat}}
26 November 1944Joachim
{{small|7th Prince Murat}}
20 July 19444 months, 6 daysKilled in World War II.
Konstanze von Schulthess
{{small|German author}}
27 January 1945Claus von Stauffenberg
{{small|German army officer}}
21 July 19446 months, 6 daysExecuted for 20 July plot against Hitler.
Eva Barbara Fegelein5 May 1945Hermann Fegelein
{{small|High-ranking Nazi officer}}
28 April 19456 daysExecution.
Frederica von Stade
{{small|American opera singer}}
1 June 1945Charles S. von Stade
{{small|South African-American polo champion}}
10 April 19451 month, 20 daysKilled in World War II.Horace A. Laffaye, Polo in the United States: A History, Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2011, p. 355
Graça Machel
{{small|Mozambican politician}}
17 October 1945Her father30 September 194517 days{{cite news |url= http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/graca-machel-there-is-nothing-exceptional-about-me-/186451 |title= Graca Machel: There Is Nothing Exceptional About Me... |date= 16 August 2014 |publisher= This Day Live |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150713231840/http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/graca-machel-there-is-nothing-exceptional-about-me-/186451 |archive-date= 13 July 2015 |df= dmy-all }}
Bill Clinton
{{small|42nd President of the United States}}
19 August 1946William Jefferson Blythe Jr.
{{small|American traveling salesman}}
17 May 19463 months, 2 daysAutomobile accident.
Peter Kocan
{{small|Australian author and attempted assassin of Arthur Calwell}}
4 May 1947His father3 monthsAutomobile accident.
Pedro López
{{small|Colombian serial killer}}
8 October 1948Midardo Reyes4 April 19486 months, 4 daysMurdered in La Violencia.Cowton, Michael (2020) Murders that shocked the world - 70s. Banovallum, 200 pages.
Jett Williams
{{small|American singer}}
6 January 1953Hank Williams
{{small|American singer}}
1 January 1953{{ntsh|5}}5 daysPossibly drug-induced cardiac arrest.
Wally Carr
{{small|Aboriginal Australian boxer}}
11 August 1954His father2 monthsSuicide by gunshot.
Janet Lynn Skinner
{{small|American Gospel musician}}
5 July 1955Billie HailleSpinal meningitis.
Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum
{{small|President of the Dubai Civil Aviation Authority and founder of The Emirates Group}}
1 December 1958Saeed bin Maktoum bin Hasher Al Maktoum
{{small|Emir of Dubai}}
9 September 19582 months, 21 days
Tyrone Power Jr.
{{small|American actor}}
22 January 1959Tyrone Power
{{small|American actor}}
15 November 19582 months, 7 daysFulminant angina pectoris while filming an action scene.
Antwone Fisher
{{small|American author and film director}}
3 August 1959Eddie Elkins2 monthsMurdered (shot) by a jealous girlfriend.
John Clark Gable
{{small|American actor}}
20 March 1961Clark Gable
{{small|American actor}}
16 November 19604 months, 4 daysHeart attack induced by an arterial blood clot.
Yves Amu Klein
{{small|French artist}}
6 August 1962Yves Klein
{{small|French Nouveau réalisme artist}}
6 June 1962{{ntsh|61}}2 monthsThree heart attacks, the first while watching the exploitation film Mondo Cane.
Sławomir Makaruk
{{small|Polish traveler and photographer}}
4 October 1963Sławomir Makaruk
{{small|Polish aviator}}
20 April 1963{{ntsh|167}}5 months, 13 daysAccident aboard an experimental SZD-21 Kobuz glider.
Tariq Al-Ali
{{small|Kuwaiti actor and comedian}}
18 January 1966His father
Rory Kennedy
{{small|American documentary filmmaker}}
12 December 1968Robert F. Kennedy
{{small|U.S. Senator from New York and younger brother of John F. Kennedy}}
6 June 1968{{ntsh|189}}6 months, 6 daysAssassination while campaigning for the 1968 Democratic Party presidential primaries.
Fred Hampton Jr.
{{small|American political activist}}
29 December 1969Fred Hampton
{{small|American Marxist-Leninist revolutionary and deputy chairman of the Black Panther Party}}
4 December 1969{{ntsh|189}}25 daysKilled by the Chicago Police Department in a raid. The status of this as an assassination is somewhat disputed; however many sources see this as an assassination or at least a politically motivated extrajudicial execution, with support from the FBI's COINTELPRO program.{{Cite news|last1=Gottlieb|first1=Jeff|last2=Cohen|first2=Jeff|date=1976-12-26|title=Was Fred Hampton Executed?|journal=The Nation|language=en-US|url=https://www.thenation.com/article/society/was-fred-hampton-executed/|access-date=2021-01-15|issn=0027-8378|archive-date=2021-01-09|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210109225117/https://www.thenation.com/article/society/was-fred-hampton-executed/|url-status=live}}{{Cite web|last=Martin|first=Alison|date=2020-12-02|title=This week in history: Fred Hampton's murder makes headlines|url=https://chicago.suntimes.com/2020/12/2/21841523/fred-hampton-black-panther-murder-chicago|access-date=2021-01-15|website=Chicago Sun-Times|language=en|archive-date=2021-02-13|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210213123437/https://chicago.suntimes.com/2020/12/2/21841523/fred-hampton-black-panther-murder-chicago|url-status=live}}{{Cite web|last=Lee|first=William|title=In 1969, charismatic Black Panthers leader Fred Hampton was killed in a hail of gunfire. 50 years later, the fight against police brutality continues|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-black-panthers-raid-fred-hampton-50-years-20191203-kbzgztrvtfh7tp7x4ggtvhncpm-story.html|access-date=2021-01-15|website=chicagotribune.com|date=3 December 2019 |archive-date=2021-01-09|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210109225115/https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-black-panthers-raid-fred-hampton-50-years-20191203-kbzgztrvtfh7tp7x4ggtvhncpm-story.html|url-status=live}}{{Cite book|last=Haas|first=Jeffrey|title=The Assassination of Fred Hampton: How the FBI and the Chicago Police Murdered a Black Panther|publisher=Lawrence Hill Books|year=2011|isbn=978-1569767092|location=|pages=}}{{Cite web|last1=Taylor|first1=G. Flint, Founding Partner, People's Law Office|author1-link=G. Flint Taylor|date=2012-12-05|title='Nothing but a Northern Lynching': The Assassination of Fred Hampton|url=https://www.huffpost.com/entry/fred-hamptom-death_b_2234651|access-date=2021-01-15|website=HuffPost|language=en|archive-date=2021-05-14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210514150240/https://www.huffpost.com/entry/fred-hamptom-death_b_2234651|url-status=live}}{{Cite web|title=The Assassination · The Assassination of Fred Hampton · Digital Chicago|url=https://digitalchicagohistory.org/exhibits/show/fred-hampton-50th/the-assassination|access-date=2021-01-15|website=digitalchicagohistory.org|archive-date=2020-11-02|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201102022639/https://digitalchicagohistory.org/exhibits/show/fred-hampton-50th/the-assassination|url-status=live}}
Brandon Teena
{{small|American victim of transphobic hate murder}}
12 December 1972Patrick Brandon7 April 1972{{ntsh|249}}8 months, 5 daysAutomobile accident.
Philippe Cousteau Jr.
{{small|Franco-American oceanographer and environmental activist}}
20 January 1980Philippe Cousteau
{{small|French cinematographer}}
28 June 1979{{ntsh|206}}6 months, 21 daysAviation accident.
Diana Yukawa
{{small|Japanese-British violinist and composer}}
16 September 1985Akihisa Yukawa
{{small|Japanese banker}}
12 August 1985{{ntsh|35}}1 month, 4 daysJapan Air Lines Flight 123 crash.
Natasha Ignatenko
{{small|Chernobyl disaster victim}}
1986Vasily Ignatenko
{{small|Soviet firefighter}}
13 May 1986Acute Radiation Syndrome contracted while extinguishing fires above the exploded Reactor Nº4.
Gia Coppola
{{small|American filmmaker}}
1 January 1987Gian-Carlo Coppola
{{small|American film producer}}
26 May 1986{{ntsh|220}}7 months, 3 daysSpeedboating accident.

Posthumous birth after the mother's death

It can happen that the mother dies before giving birth. This usually results in the death of the child, but in exceptional cases the child, surgically removed from the mother's womb, can survive.

There is only a handful of such records. The most famous is perhaps the case of Raymond Nonnatus (1204–1240), the Spanish saint in the Middle Ages, who was born this way. His Latin adjective also suggests this ("unborn").https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12671b.htm

A similar case is reported by Andrea Majocchi (1876–1965), an Italian doctor who mentions in his book a case where two live babies were removed from their mother's womb before delivery and brought to the doctor, but there they suddenly died.Andrea Majocchi: A műtőlámpa fényében. Egy sebész önéletrajza, Dante Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1940 (in Hungarian)

In 2024, a Palestinian baby was removed from her mother's womb at 30 weeks gestation after her mother was killed in a drone strike. The baby died in the incubator a few days later.https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/4/26/gaza-baby-girl-saved-from-dead-mothers-womb-dies-in-incubator

Modern medical technologies allow homeostasis and overall organ function to be maintained in brain-dead pregnant women to ensure proper development of the fetus, leading to the successful delivery of a healthy child.[https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8141338/ Delivery of a Healthy Baby from a Brain-Dead Woman After 117 Days of Somatic Support: A Case Report]

The so-called coffin birth is strongly distinguished from the "birth" after the death of the mother. This is the inverse of the former. Here the baby is actually born but is already dead. It differs from the normal stillbirth in that here the mother is already dead too, and only the decomposition gases / contraction of the body inside her push out the baby's also dead body.

Religious and mythological people born posthumously

The Bible's Old Testament mentions two named cases of posthumous children:

  • Ashhur, youngest son of Hezron, born when his father had died when aged past 60 years. (1 Chronicles 2:21, 24)
  • Ichabod, who was born when his mother, who subsequently died, heard news that his father Phinehas had been killed at the Battle of Aphek and paternal grandfather Eli accidentally killed afterwards. (1 Samuel 4:19–22)

= Indian mythology =

= Greek mythology =

  • The medicine god Asclepius is said to have been delivered by caesarean section after his mother Cyrene was killed on Mount Olympus by his aunt Artemis.
  • The wine god Dionysus is said to have been rescued from the ashes of his mother Semele after she is unwillingly incinerated by his father Zeus while she was pregnant with him. Zeus then sows Dionysus to his groin until he is fully born.

= Celtic mythology =

Fictional characters born posthumously

  • Macduff, a character in Shakespeare's Macbeth, revealed that he was not literally born, but removed from his [dead] mother, completing a plot twist.
  • In Gabrielle-Suzanne de Villeneuve's fairy tale Beauty and the Beast, the Prince's father, the King, died months before he was born.
  • The Irish Republican song "The Broad Black Brimmer" was about a boy whose father died before he was born.
  • In The Adventures of Sinbad: TV series 11th episode "The Prince Who Wasn't" A man tries to eradicate his brother's bloodline by murdering his brother and only nephew. It's later revealed that his sister-in-law is pregnant.
  • The Charles Dickens character David Copperfield was a posthumous child, whose father had died six months before he was born.{{cite web|url= http://www.blundeston.org.uk/copperquotes.html |publisher= Blundeston |title=David Copperfield |access-date= 5 July 2015}} Another Dickens character, Oliver Twist, was posthumous as his mother died while giving birth.
  • On A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child, baby Jacob was born after his father Dan was killed by Freddy.
  • In The Hunger Games series, Gale Hawthorne's sister Posy is born shortly after their father dies in a mine explosion, and Finnick Odair's son is born months after his death in battle.
  • John Connor, a principal character in the Terminator franchise, and son of Sarah Connor and Kyle Reese (a time traveler from the future), was conceived shortly before his father was killed. As an adult, John was in fact responsible for selecting Reese (who was unaware of their relation) to go back in time.
  • The Noughts & Crosses series character Callie-Rose Hadley is born after the execution of her father, Callum McGregor.
  • In the British television soap opera Coronation Street, Liam Connor Jr. was born in July 2009; his father and namesake Liam Connor, was ordered murdered by Tony Gordon just a short time after Liam Jr.'s conception in October 2008.
  • The Stephen King novel Carrie tells briefly of the parents of the titular character, Margaret and Ralph White. Ralph, a construction worker, had impregnated Margaret, only to be killed in a construction accident shortly before the birth of their daughter.
  • In Berserk, the main character Guts is found after having been birthed by a hanging corpse.
  • Grey's Anatomy: Derek Shepherd dies in a car accident in Season 11, nine months before the birth of his daughter.
  • Bahubali series: Mahendra Bahubali is born shortly after his father Amarendra Bahubali is killed.
  • Star Wars Rebels: Kanan Jarrus dies sacrificing himself while rescuing his lover Hera Syndulla, who is pregnant with their son, Jacen Syndulla.
  • In A Song of Ice and Fire, Princess Daenerys Targaryen is born months after the death of her father, King Aerys II Targaryen.
  • Avatar series: Grace Augustine's human form was killed by Colonel Miles Quaritch, but her unconscious Avatar body was kept in stasis and later gave birth to Kiri.
  • In the Bridgerton novels and its Netflix adaptation, the youngest child Hyacinth is born in the weeks following her father’s death from anaphylactic shock from a bee sting.

See also

References

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