Anti-Abortionism

Anti-Abortionism is an ideology that stands against abortion.

Ancient Near East
The earliest recorded laws against abortion come from the Assyrian Empire, whose legal code (11th century BCE) states; "If a woman with her consent brings on a miscarriage, they sieze her and determine her guilt.  On a stake they impale her and do not bury her".

What the Hebrew Bible said about abortion is, to say the least, controversial. One passage cited against abortion is "When men get in a fight and hit a pregnant woman so that her children are born prematurely but there is no injury, the one who hit her must be fined as the woman’s husband demands from him, and he must pay according to judicial assessment." (Exodus 21.22, CSB). A passage cited in favor of abortion is the "Trial of Bitter Water" in Numbers 5, in which a priest preforms a rite on a pregnant woman guilty of adultery. According to the NIV Bible, the priest says "May this water that brings a curse enter your body so that your abdomen swells or your womb miscarries." (Numbers 5.22). However, other translations of this verse do not say "miscarries", but instead either "your thigh fall away" (ESV and JPS) or "your womb to shrivel" (CSB).

Classical Europe
The Ancient Greeks were generally not against abortion. However, there were exceptions; the ancient Hippocratic Oath declared "I will not give to a woman a pessary to cause abortion". The philosopher Pythagoras of Samos (6th century BCE) believed that life began at conception; the ancient historian Diogenes Laertius, describing the beliefs of Pythagoras, said "when brought to the womb ... soul and sense come from the vapour within" (Lives VIII.28). The same source records how Pythagoras "forbade even the killing, let alone the eating, of animals which share with us the privilege of having a soul" (VIII.13). By extension he likely would have opposed abortion.

The early Christian church was almost universally anti-abortion. The Didache (1st century CE) declared "you shall not murder a child by abortion nor kill that which is begotten" (chapter II). Athenagoras of Athens (2nd century CE) wrote "we say that those women who use drugs to bring on abortion commit murder" (Plea XXXV). Tertullian (2nd century CE) wrote "we may not destroy even the fœtus in the womb" (Apology IX). Christian lawyer Minucius Felix (3rd century AD) identified abortion with murder "There are some women who, by drinking medical preparations, extinguish the source of the future man in their very bowels, and thus commit a parricide before they bring forth" (Octavius XXX). Basil the Great (4th century CE) wrote clearly, "The woman who purposely destroys her unborn child is guilty of murder" (Letter CLXXXVIII.ii) and "Women also who administer drugs to cause abortion, as well as those who take poisons to destroy unborn children, are murderesses" (Letter CLXXXVIII.viii).

Medieval and Renaissance Europe
It should be unsurprising then that abortion was viewed negatively in medieval Europe. The Council of Trullo (7th century CE) in the Byzantine Empire declared "Those who give drugs for procuring abortion, and those who receive poisons to kill the fœtus, are subjected to the penalty of murder." (Canon 91). The Visigothic Code, the legal system of Visigothic Spain, declared "we hereby decree that if either a freewoman or a slave should kill her child before, or after its birth; or should take any potion for the purpose of producing abortion, or should use any other means of putting an end to the life of her child, the judge of the province or district, as soon as he is advised of the fact, shall at once condemn the author of the crime to execution in public" (Lex Visigothorum VI.iii.7). English jurist Henry Bracton (13th century CE) wrote "If one strikes a pregnant woman or gives her poison in order to procure an abortion, if the foetus is already formed or quickened, especially if it is quickened, he commits homicide".

John Calvin, an early leader of the Protestant Reformation, wrote "the foetus, though enclosed in the womb of its mother, is already a human being, ( homo,) and it is almost a monstrous crime to rob it of the life which it has not yet begun to enjoy".

United States
[W.I.P.]

United Kingdom
In 1803, the United Kingdom parliament passed what's called "Lord Ellenborough's Act", which declared illegalized anyone causing a woman to abort her child, with the punishment being "... to be fined, imprisoned, set in and upon the pillory, publickly or privately whipped, or to suffer one or more of the said punishments, or to be transported beyond the seas for any term not exceeding fourteen years, at the discretion of the court".

Continental Western Europe
[W.I.P.]

Russia
In Tsarist Russia, abortion was punishable by death. A relatively famous case is that of Mary Hamilton, a mistress of the Tsar executed for abortion in 1719. This changed in the 20th century with the overthrow of the Tsar and the creation of the Soviet Union. The USSR was the first country to legalize abortion and to make it avaliable to the average woman. This changed again during the time of Josef Stalin, who in 1936 made abortion illegal again. Stalin decreed, "The performance of abortions shall be allowed exclusively in those cases when the continuation of pregnancy endangers life or threatens serious injury to the health of the pregnant woman" and "For the performance of abortions outside a hospital or in a hospital under conditions violating the above provisions, the doctor performing the abortion shall be criminally punishable to the extent of one to two years' imprisonment", and lastly "For compelling a woman to undergo an abortion, criminal penalty of two years' imprisonment shall be fixed.".

This changed yet again in 1955, when the USSR legalized abortion as it was in pre-Stalin times. This continued to be the case in the early Russian Federation after the USSR's collapse.

In 2011, the Russian Federation under Dmitri Medvedev passed a law restricting ability to abortion, while still keeping it legal. Svetlana Medvedeva, a former First Lady, is a major figure in the Russian anti-abortion movement. The Russian Orthodox Church also opposes abortion.

Other
[W.I.P.]

Friends

 * [W.I.P.]

Frenemies

 * [W.I.P.]

Enemies

 * [W.I.P.]

Wikipedia

 * Anti-abortion movements
 * Fetal rights
 * Anti-abortion violence
 * Anti-abortion feminism