Posthumous birth

A posthumous birth is the birth of a child after the death of a biological parent.[1] 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 its father, but the term is also applied to infants delivered after the death of the mother, usually by caesarean section.[2]

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,[3] 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. Another emerging legal issue in the United States is the control of genetic material after the death of the donor.[4] 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.[5]

In monarchies

A posthumous birth has special significance in the case of hereditary monarchies following primogeniture. In this system, a monarch's own child precedes that monarch's sibling in the order of succession. In cases where the widow of a childless king is pregnant at the time of his death, the next-in-line is not permitted to assume the throne, but must yield place to the unborn child, or ascends and reigns until the child is born. In monarchies that follow male-preference cognatic primogeniture, the situation is similar where the dead monarch 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 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.[3] 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.[6] 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.[7] 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.[7] 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.[3] 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.[8]

In Ancient Rome, posthumous children of noble birth were often given the cognomen (or third name) ‘Postumus.’ One example is Agrippa Postumus. However, it is likely that the term simply meant “the last child” or youngest born and did not always indicate posthumous birth.

Notable people born posthumously

Li Dazhao, born in 1889 after his father died a few months ago, was one of the famous thinkers during the May Fourth Movement and later co-founded the Chinese Communist Party.

Name Born Late parent Parent died Gap Comments
Alexander IV of MacedonAugust 323 BCAlexander III (the Great) of Macedon11 June 323 BC2 months
Shapur II
10th king of the Sasanian Empire (309–379)
309Hormizd II
8th king (302–309)
309Shapur is believed to be the only monarch in history who was crowned in utero
Muhammad
Prophet of Islam
c. 570Abdullah ibn Abdul-Muttalib5706 months
Robert I
King of France
15 August 866Robert the Strong2 July 8666 weeksRobert the Strong died at the Battle of Brissarthe
Charles III "The Simple"
King of France
17 September 879Louis the Stammerer10 April 8795 months
Lothair III
Holy Roman Emperor
1075Gebhard of Supplinburg9 June 1075?Born "shortly after" his father's death
Valdemar I the Great
King of Denmark
14 January 1131Canute Lavard7 January 11317 days
Baldwin V
King of Jerusalem
August 1177William of Montferrat, Count of Jaffa and AscalonJune 11772 months
Arthur I
Duke of Brittany
29 March 1187Geoffrey II, Duke of Brittany19 August 11867 months
Theobald I
King of Navarre
30 May 1201Theobald III, Count of Champagne24 May 12016 days
St Raymond Nonnatus
Catalan religious
1204His mother1204-Believed to have been delivered from his mother's womb after she died during childbirth.[2]
Przemysł II
King of Poland
14 October 1257Przemysł I of Greater Poland4 June 12574 months
John I "The Posthumous"
King of France
15 November 1316King Louis X of France5 June 13165 monthsHe lived for only six days, but was a king for his entire short life.
John, 3rd Earl of Kent7 April 1330Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent19 March 133019 daysEdmund was executed
William of Bavaria-Munich1435William III, Duke of Bavaria12 September 1435up to 3 monthsHe also died in 1435
Ladislaus the Posthumous
King of Bohemia, Hungary and Croatia, Duke of Austria
22 February 1440King Albert II of Germany27 October 14394 months
Henry VII
King of England
28 January 1457Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond1 or 3 November 14563 months
John Louis
Count of Nassau-Saarbrücken
19 October 1472Johann II of Nassau-Saarbrücken15 July 14723 months
Pope Clement VII26 May 1478Giuliano de' Medici26 April 14781 monthGiuliano was assassinated in the Pazzi Conspiracy
Alexander Stewart
Duke of Ross
30 April 1514King James IV of Scotland9 September 15137 monthsHis father King James IV died at the Battle of Flodden; Alexander died at the age of only 20 months, but during his short life he was heir presumptive to the throne of the Kingdom of Scotland
Françoise d'Orléans-Longueville5 April 1549François d'Orléans, Marquis of Rothelin, Prince of Chalet-Aillon, Viscount of Melun25 October 15485 months
Sebastian
King of Portugal
20 January 1554João Manuel, Prince of Portugal2 January 155418 daysUpon his birth, Sebastian immediately became Crown Prince
Ben Jonson
Elizabethan playwright
c. 11 June 1572April 15722 months
Friedrich Wilhelm II
Duke of Saxe-Altenburg
12 February 1603Friedrich Wilhelm I, Duke of Saxe-Weimar7 July 16027 months
St Joseph of Cupertino
Italian mystic
17 June 1603Felice Desa??
François-Henri de Montmorency
Duke of Luxembourg
8 January 1628François de Montmorency-Bouteville22 June 16276 monthsHis father was executed for dueling
Sir Isaac Newton
English scientist, mathematician
4 January 1643Isaac Newton, Sr.September-October 17423 months
William III
King of England and Ireland
14 November 1650William II, Prince of Orange6 November 16508 daysHe was born Prince of Orange; aka William II of Scotland
Adolphus Frederick II
Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
19 October 1658Adolf Frederick I, Duke of Mecklenburg27 February 16587 months
Jonathan Swift
Irish writer (Gulliver's Travels)
30 November 1667Jonathan Swift, Sr.c. April 16677 months
William August
Duke of Saxe-Eisenach
30 November 1668Adolf William, Duke of Saxe-Eisenach21 November 16689 days
Edward Ward, 9th Baron Dudley16 June 1704Edward Ward, 8th Baron Dudley28 March 1704[9]10 weeks
Georg Wilhelm Richmann
German physicist
22 July 1711
William IV
Prince of Orange
1 September 1711John William Friso, Prince of Orange14 July 17116 weeks
Robert Petre, 8th Baron Petre
British peer and horticulturist
3 June 1713Robert Petre, 7th Baron Petre22 March 171310 weeks
John Morton
U.S. politician
1725John Morton, Sr.1725
Sir Brook Bridges, 3rd Baronet17 September 1733Sir Brook Bridges, 2nd Bt23 May 1733[10]4 months
Caroline Matilda
Queen Consort of King Christian VII of Denmark
11 July 1751Frederick, Prince of Wales20 March 17514 months
Thomas Chatterton
English poet and forger
20 November 1752Thomas Chatterton Sr.7 August 1752[11]15 weeks
Elizabeth Simcoe
British artist, diarist in colonial Canada
22 September 1762Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Gwillim??
Benedict Joseph Flaget
U.S. bishop
7 November 1763
Andrew Jackson
President of the United States
15 March 1767Andrew Jackson, Sr.February 17673 weeksHis father was killed in a lumber accident
Tenskwatawa
Native American leader, Shawnee Prophet
1775Pukeesheno??
Arthur MacArthur Sr.
Scottish born lawyer, Governor of Wisconsin
26 January 181519 January 18157 daysPaternal grandfather of General Douglas MacArthur
Henri, Count of Chambord
French prince and pretender to the throne
29 September 1820Charles Ferdinand, duc de Berry14 February 18207 months
Rutherford B. Hayes
President of the United States
4 October 1822Rutherford Hayes Jr20 July 182210 weeks
Jemima Blackburn
Scottish painter
1 May 1823James Wedderburnlate 1822c. 6 months
Anna Leonowens
British teacher and co-subject of The King and I
5 November 1831Thomas Edwards3 months
David Hyrum Smith7 November 1844Joseph Smith
Founder of Mormonism and the Latter Day Saint movement
27 June 18445 monthsDeath of Joseph Smith
Horace Tabberer Brown
British chemist
1848
Samuel Alexander
Australian-born philosopher
1859Born shortly after his father's death.
George Washington Carver
U.S. botanical researcher and educator
c. 1864His father was killed
Harry "The Breaker" Morant
Australian soldier and folk hero
9 December 1864Edwin MurrantAugust 18644 monthsMorant was born Edwin Henry Murrant
Frank Anstey
Australian politician
18 August 1865Samuel Anstey?5 months
Rua Kenana Hepetipa
New Zealand Maori faith healer
1869Kenana TumoanaNovember 18683 monthsTumoana was killed at Makaretu while fighting for Te Kooti
George Washington Thomas Lambert
Russian-born Australian artist, father of Constant Lambert
13 September 1873George Washington Lambert25 July 18737 weeksHis father was an American who died in London
Carl Adolph Schuricht
German conductor
3 July 1880Carl Conrad Schuricht?3 weeksHis father drowned in the Baltic Sea while trying to save a friend in distress
Charles Edward, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha19 July 1884Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany28 March 18844 months
Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz
U.S. admiral
24 February 1885Chester Bernard Nimitz14 August 18846 months
Clara Sipprell
Canadian photographer
31 October 1885
Alfonso XIII
King of Spain
17 May 1886King Alfonso XII25 November 18856 months
Mabel Mercer
UK/US jazz singer
3 Feb 1900-??[12]
Stanley Kunitz
Lithuanian-U.S. poet
29 July 1905June 19056 weeksHis father committed suicide by ingesting carbolic acid in a public park, after going bankrupt
Johan Kjær Hansen
Executed Danish resistance fighter
7 April 1907Hans Christian Johan Andreas Hansen13 December 19064 monthsHis father died aged 34 near the methodist church in Hjørring[13]
Xiao Qian
Chinese essayist
27 January 1910
John Jacob Astor VI14 August 1912John Jacob Astor IV15 April 19124 monthsHis father drowned in the sinking of the RMS Titanic
Red Skelton
U.S. actor and comedian
18 July 1913Born shortly after the death of his father
Georg Brockhoff Quistgaard
Executed Danish resistance fighter
19 February 1915Georg Brockhoff Quistgaard18 December 19142 monthsHis namesake father died in Rigshospitalet aged 40
Alfred Shaughnessy
English writer and television producer
19 May 1916Alfred Shaughnessy2 monthsHis namesake father was killed in the First World War
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Russian novelist
11 December 1918Isaakiy Semyonovich Solzhenitsyn15 June 19186 monthsHis father was killed in a hunting accident shortly after his wife's pregnancy was confirmed
John Mitchum
US actor
6 September 1919James MitchumFebruary 19197 monthsHis father was killed in a railyard accident
Alexandra of Yugoslavia
Queen Consort of King Peter II of Yugoslavia
25 March 1921Alexander
King of Greece
25 October 19205 monthsAlexander died from the effects of a monkey bite
Jules Olitski
Russian-American painter, sculptor
27 March 1922A few monthsHis father, a commissar, was executed by the Soviet government
Elisabeth of Austria
Archduchess of Austria
31 May 1922Charles I of Austria1 April 19222 monthsCharles had earlier been deposed but had never formally abdicated
Stephen Wurm
Hungarian-Australian linguist
19 August 1922Adolphe Wurm
Anthony Earnshaw
English anarchist
9 October 1924
Felipe Rodríguez
Puerto Rican singer
8 May 1926
Earl Holliman
U.S. actor
11 September 19286 months
Bertram Wainer
Australian abortion law reform activist
30 December 1928[14]
Itamar Franco
33rd President of Brazil
28 June 1930Augusto César Stiebler FrancoApril 19302 monthsItamar was born at sea prematurely in a cabotage ship two months after his father died of malaria.[15]
Thomas Sowell
U.S. economist
30 June 1930
Brian Sewell*
British art critic
15 July 1931Peter Warlock* (Philip Heseltine)17 December 19307 monthsWarlock died either accidentally or by suicide (the inquest delivered an open finding); * Sewell has only since 1986 claimed to be Warlock's son
Don Durant
U.S. actor
20 November 19322 monthsHis father was killed in a truck accident
Margaret O'Brien
U.S. actress
15 January 1937Lawrence O'Brienc. 1936
Ian Brady
English serial killer
2 January 1938unknown3 months
Lee Harvey Oswald
Assassin of U.S. President John F. Kennedy
18 October 1939Robert Edward Lee Oswald19 August 19392 months
Edwin Wilson
Australian poet
27 October 1942
Sir Henry Cecil
British champion racehorse trainer
11 January 1943Lt. Hon. Henry Kerr Auchmuty Cecil30 Nov - 2 Dec 1942[16]6 weeks[16] or 2 weeks[17]His father was killed on active service with the Parachute Regiment in North Africa[17]
Sylvester McCoy
Scottish actor (Doctor Who)
20 August 1943Percy Kent-Smith18 July 19431 monthHis father was killed in World War II
Sir Ranulph Fiennes, 3rd Bt
British explorer and adventurer
7 March 1944Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Ranulph Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes, 2nd Bt24 November 19433 monthsHis father was killed in action at the Battle of Monte Cassino, Italy
Bernard Collaery
Australian lawyer and politician
12 October 19444 monthsHis father died on active service
Frederica von Stade
U.S. operatic soprano
1 June 1945Charles S. von Stade10 April 19452 monthsHer father was killed in Germany in World War II when his jeep ran over a land mine
Bill Clinton
President of the United States 1993–2001
19 August 1946William Jefferson Blythe Jr.17 May 19463 monthsHis father drowned following a car accident
Peter Kocan
Australian attempted assassin of Federal Opposition Leader Arthur Calwell in 1966; later a noted poet
4 May 19473 monthsHis father was killed in a road accident
Jett Williams
U.S. singer
6 January 1953Hank Williams1 January 19535 daysHer father, also a singer, died of alcohol- and drug-fueled heart failure
Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum
President of Dubai Civil Aviation Authority
1 December 1958Saeed bin Maktoum bin Hasher Al Maktoum
Ruler of Dubai
9 September 19583 months
Tyrone Power Jr.
U.S. actor
22 January 1959Tyrone Power15 November 19582 monthsHis father died of a heart attack while filming Solomon and Sheba on location in Madrid, Spain
Antwone Fisher
U.S. author, screenwriter and film producer
3 August 1959Eddie Elkins2 monthsHe was born in prison; his father was shot by a jealous girlfriend 2 months earlier
John Clark Gable
Actor
20 March 1961Clark Gable16 November 19604 monthsHis father died of coronary thrombosis.
Yves Amu Klein
French artist
6 August 1962Yves Klein6 June 19622 monthsHis father died of a heart attack
Rory Kennedy
U.S. documentary film maker
12 December 1968Robert F. Kennedy6 June 19686 monthsHer father was assassinated during the 1968 Presidential election campaign
Brandon Teena
Hate crime murder victim
12 December 1972Patrick Brandon7 April 19728 monthsHis father was killed in a car accident.
Philippe Cousteau Jr.
Environmental advocate
20 January 1980Philippe Cousteau28 June 19796 monthsHis father was killed in a plane crash
Diana Yukawa
Japanese-British violinist and songwriter
16 September 1985Akihisa Yukawa12 August 19851 monthHer father was killed in the Japan Airlines Flight 123 crash
Gia Coppola
American film director and actress
1 January 1987Gian-Carlo Coppola26 May 19867 monthsHer father was killed in a boating accident
Tuki Brando
Fashion model
26 June 1990Dag Drollet16 May 19901 monthHis father was shot and killed by his uncle Christian Brando
Iryana Leila
Princess of Iran
26 July 2011Ali-Reza Pahlavi4 January 20116 monthsHer father committed suicide in Boston

Fictional people

Parikshit, the sole survivor of the Kuru dynasty in Mahabharata, was born after his father Abhimanyu was killed in the Kurukshetra war.

The Greek god Asclepius is said to have been delivered by caesarean section after his mother was killed on Mount Olympus.[2]

Macduff, a character in Shakespeare's Macbeth, revealed that he was not literally born, but removed from his [dead] mother, completing a plot twist.

The Irish Republican song "The Broad Black Brimmer" was about a boy whose father died before he was born.

The Charles Dickens character David Copperfield was a posthumous child, whose father had died six months before he was born.[18]

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 and 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.

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 gets killed.

Star Wars Rebels: Kanan Jarrus dies sacrificing himself while rescuing his lover Hera Syndulla who is pregnant with their son, Jacen Syndulla.

See also

References

  1. THE ETHICAL AND LEGAL QUAGMIRES OF POSTMORTEM REPRODUCTION Archived 2007-10-09 at the Wayback Machine., by Christie Brough, 21st National Conference on Undergraduate Research, Dominican University of California, April 2007
  2. 1 2 3 Christine Quigley, The Corpse: A History, McFarland, 1996, ISBN 0-7864-0170-2, pages 180 to 181.
  3. 1 2 3 Renee H. Sekino, Posthumous Conception: The Birth of a New Class Archived 2004-07-15 at the Wayback Machine., Boston University Journal of Sci. and Tech. Law, 2001.
  4. "Frozen in Time: Planning for the Posthumously Conceived Child". The National Law Review. Fairfield and Woods P.C. 2009-07-09. Retrieved 2012-04-07.
  5. U.S. Department of State Foreign Affairs Manual Volume 8, 8 FAM 304.4 Posthumous Children, accessed July 18, 2018
  6. Report 49 (1986) — Artificial Conception: Human Artificial Insemination, 12. AIH and Posthumous Use of Semen, Law Reform Commission, New South Wales
  7. 1 2 Posthumous fathers to be recognised, BBC News, 25 August 2000
  8. Bowman, William Dodgson. The Story of Surnames. London, George Routledge & Sons, Ltd., 1932. No ISBN.
  9. The Peerage. Retrieved 14 March 2014
  10. leighrayment, The Baronetage. Retrieved 14 March 2014
  11. Wikisource. Retrieved 14 March 2014
  12. New York Times, 21 April 1984. Retrieved 13 July 2015
  13. "Døde Mandkøn" [Deceased Males]. Kirkebog [Parish Register]. 1899–1911 (in Danish). Hjørring Sogn. 13 December 1906. p. 91.
  14. Australian Dictionary of Biography. Retrieved 29 October 2017
  15. Corpo de Itamar Franco chega a Juiz de Fora (MG), onde será velado UOL (In Portuguese), 3 July 2011, accessed in 29 November 2016.
  16. 1 2 "Lt. Hon. Henry Kerr Auchmuty Cecil". thepeerage.com. Retrieved 4 March 2014.
  17. 1 2 Wilson, Julian (11 June 2013). "Sir Henry Cecil obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 July 2015.
  18. "Blundeston - David Copperfield". blundeston.org.uk. Retrieved 5 July 2015.
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