I hope this isn't too complicated. When listing births for numerous children, I like to think of that kind of time frame in terms of "baby bearing time" rather than a number that represents a calendar year. So it is important to look at the month of the year in addition to the year itself. For instance, on your list you show Emile is born in 1890 and Vladimar born in 1893. On the surface that appears to be 3 years. But when I look at it in terms of "baby bearing time, it could be as little time as 24 months. If Emile was born in Dec, 1890 and Vladimar was born in Jan. 1893, the actual passage of time is only 12 months in the calendar year 1891 and 12 months in 1892. So there was time to have 2 children in there but a close squeeze. Especially as she seems to be nearing the end of her baby having time. I must admit that based on your listing she had quite a few very busy years in there. I often wonder how people who had children that close together managed to do all they had to do. Raising a couple of close kids is a lot of work today--and we have canned baby food, pampers, electric washing machines, etc. Those women were doing laundry on a washboard in a tub in the yard, cooking most things from scratch all the while nursing a baby with 2 toddlers underfoot. They were indeed "supermoms." Carolyn Tregre