A wet nurse is a woman who breastfeeds and cares for another's child. Wet nurses are employed if the mother dies, if she is unable to nurse the child herself sufficiently or chooses not to do so. Wet-nursed children may be known as "milk-siblings", and in some societies, the families are linked by a special relationship of milk kinship. Wet-nursing existed in societies around the world until the invention of reliable formula milk in the 20th century. The practice has made a small comeback in the 21st century.
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4796 - Brescia - S. Giulia - Stele di Lucio Nutrio Gallo (sec. I) - Foto Giovanni Dall'Orto, 25 Giu 2011.jpg
Funerary stele for Lucius Nutrius Gallus (Inscriptiones Italiae, X V, 163), who built it for himself...
A Russian wet nurse, c. 1913.jpg
A Russian wet nurse, c. 1913. Painted by Frédéric de Haenen
An infant who has been living with a wet-nurse being taken a Wellcome V0015113.jpg
An infant who has been living with a wet-nurse being taken away from its foster-parents by its natu...
Catherine Willoughby exiled.jpg
Catherine Willoughby, Duchess of Suffolk, fleeing Catholic England with her husband Richard Bertie, ...
Louis XIV as an infant with his nurse Longuet de la Giraudiere.jpg
The bureau of wet nurses in Paris - wet nurses waiting to be Wellcome V0015043.jpg
The bureau of wet nurses in Paris - wet nurses waiting to be selected.
Iconographic Collections
Ke...
Visite Chez la Nourrice (Visit to the Wetnurse) (from Journal l'Artiste) MET DP841080.jpg
Print; Prints
Walcourt - Parclose - Satire d'une nourice.JPG
statuette of a parclose representing a woman who presses her breast to collect milk in a bowl (a sat...
Wet Nurse.png
Enslaved Black woman wet-nursing White infant