When I was a kid I used to hear old folks and my teachers talk about how “back in the day” people had much larger families. That is true, but it wasn’t until I really got into genealogical research I realized that those large families of yore were not like the occasional large ones you see today. Mothers gave birth to a lot of babies, but they usually did not all survive.
Of course there are many variations around the world depending on geographic location, social status, and wealth, but from what I have seen in my research in France (usually in Normandy and the Loire Valley), the child mortality rates in the 17th and 18th centuries were terribly high.
On to the example of the day:
Françoise Lefaistre was born about 1709, and she married Pierre Le Simple in Sancerre, Cher, France on the 27th of January 1739.1 She gave birth to eleven children! More unusual still, she had THREE sets of twins! Ten of those eleven babies died at birth or while very young. It’s hard to contemplate that amount of tragedy.
Baptism | Burial | Name |
9 July 1741 | unknown | Pierre2 |
1 Nov 1742 | 10 Jan 1743 | Marie Françoise3 |
6 Feb 1744 | 17 Feb 1744 | Jean4 |
22 Jan 1745 | 28 Sept 1747 | Jacques Vincent5 |
12 Mar 1748 | 13 Mar 1748 | Michel6 |
12 Mar 1748 | 13 Mar 1748 | Sylvain7 |
1 Dec 1749 | 3 Dec 1749 | Catherine8 |
1 Dec 1749 | 3 Dec 1749 | Marianne9 |
9 Feb 1751 | 12 Feb 1751 | François10 |
9 Feb 1751 | 12 Feb 1751 | Paul11 |
10 July 1752 | 22 Feb 1753 | François12 |
French records almost never state the cause of death, so we can only guess at what happened to Pierre and Françoise’s children. There were plenty of causes to chose from, such as poor nutrition, lack of sanitation, accidents, lack of modern medical care, premature birth, birth complications, birth defects, and disease.
Françoise died not long after her last child on the 12th of June 1754, and was buried the next day. She was only 45.13

- Archives Départmentales du Cher, Sancerre, 3E 1033, 1738-1776, 27 janvier 1739, LeSimple & Le Faistre, image 20/376. ↩︎
- Ibid., 9 juillet 1741, Pierre LeSimple. And, ibid., im. 83. ↩︎
- Ibid., 1 nov 1742, Marie Françoise, im. 121. And ibid., 10 jan 1743, im. 128. ↩︎
- Ibid., 17 fév 1744, Jean, im. 176. Death at 11 days of age. ↩︎
- Ibid., 22 jan 1745, Jacque Vincent, im. 197. And ibid., 28 sept 1747, im. 266. ↩︎
- Ibid., 12 mars 1748, Michel, im. 274. And ibid., 14 mars. ↩︎
- Ibid., Sylvan. ↩︎
- Ibid., 1 dec 1749, Marianne & Catherine, im. 309. And ibid., 3 dec. ↩︎
- Ibid. ↩︎
- Archives Départmentales du Cher, Sancerre, 3E 1034, 9 février 1751, François & Paul, im. 5/376. And ibid., 12 fév. im. 6. ↩︎
- Ibid. ↩︎
- Ibid., 10 juill 1742, François, im. 41. And ibid., 22 fév 1743, im. 55. ↩︎
- Ibid., 13 juin 1754, Françoise LeCestre, image 93/376. ↩︎
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