Hello there. I am currently studying menstruation in the Victorian period (pun intended!) All the medical books I have looked at from the era say that the common age is around 13. So the same as today. You might also like to know that for some reason doctors were convinced that heat played a significant role in menstraution and that women in tropical climes started earlier - they estimated around the age of 9! So the answer is Victorian women started at roughly the same age as they do today! Hope that helps.
Menstruation typically begins in either late Tanner stage II or early Tanner stage III of puberty.
Because it was cold.
puberty
victorian melodrama started in the 12th century
There is no set age for a woman's menstruation to begin or end.
During Menstruation. The uterine lining sheds to prepare the uterus for pregnancy. It's due to the drop in estrogen and progesterone.
because puberty starts at the age of menstruation, that is the age at which the body is developed enough to begin with the job of reproduction.
You can't stop your period once it's started - although there are medications to delay menstruation or suppress menstruation, there is nothing that can stop menstruation half way through because the process has already begin.
No, menstruation and the status of the hymen are not related in any way.
The Victorian age began when Queen Victoria ascended to the throne on 20 June 1837 and ended when she died on 22 January 1901.
The Victorian age began when Queen Victoria ascended to the throne on 20 June 1837 and ended when she died on 22 January 1901.
That may be Premenstrual Syndrome , the symptoms that begin a week before menstruation like natures reminder that you will be starting you menstruation soon.