It’s always bothered me that the “C” section is named for Julius Caeser. Was he the very first, and how did they know what to do back then? I assume his mother died during the process for lack of knowledge. And, how was this so well known about “C” Sections that even Shakespeare makes mention of it (i.e., ~one not mother-born) at the end of Macbeth?
There’s probably no way of knowing who had the first one; probably some obscure person who didn’t record it. Caesar may have been the first one who was famous.
The trouble with the Julius Caesar “caesarian” storie is that Caesar’s mother Aurelia lived into old age. Making it, as I understand it, impossible that she could have ever undergone a caesarian, in those pre-sterile-operating-room days