« Reply #122 on: Sunday 18 December 11 11:52 GMT (UK) »
Of course it doesn't have to be infidelity.
The story of how when James II's wife was giving birth a substitute was smuggled into the Royal Bedchamber in a warming pan because the genuine baby was still born. False rumour or not, it's hard to imagine that the idea of substituting one baby for another if the circumstances demanded it should be confined to works of fiction.
Barefoot, Barley, Bedborough, Benett, Blandy, Brown, Clements, Doucett, Fisher, Franklin, Goodchild, Greenwood, Heath, Horwood, Osmond, Westbury: Berks/Berks and Wilts.
Woodhouse: Montgomeryshire
Booth, Braddock, Drabble, Hatton, Henshaw, Whitehead: Tameside and Cheshire