The King’s Evil- the miraculous royal touch in the Middle Ages

Many Medieval European rulers were believed to have miraculous healing powers, including the King’s Evil.

The House of Habsburg could kiss stuttering away.  The Monarchs of Castile could supposedly exorcise demons while their Hungarian counterparts, more prosaically, had powers over jaundice.  Meanwhile, English monarchs distributed cramp-rings, as a cure for “diabolical” sicknesses such as cramps and epilepsy.

Scrofula is the Latin word for brood sow; it’s the term applied to tuberculosis of the neck.

It was known as the King’s Evil (‘evil’ as in malady, the king’s as he was thought to be able to cure it) or, sometimes just ‘the Evil’.

Scrofula was thought to be caused by sin, especially the collective sins of the nation.

Perhaps because of this, the treatment was believed more likely to succeed if performed on a holy day.

Beginning with Edward the Confessor (c.1003-66), the English royalty claimed a hereditary divine right to cure scrofula.

The healing power was most noticeably exercised by monarchs who needed to demonstrate their reign’s legitimacy.

To the populace, it was proof of the king’s divine right to rule that he could channel the heavens.

James I of England, an intellectual, believed it was superstition and yet did it. Elizabeth I laid hands on more than a thousand subjects on one occasion.

The healing touch of some monarchs was well enough known for the afflicted to travel great distances including Russia and the New World to seek it.

Remember that traveling then usually meant walking!

If at first..

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Records show that some sufferers came repeatedly for the royal touch, proof that it had not worked the first time, the second time, or the third time.

Since the reign of Edward IV, monarchs presented the diseased with a gold medal called a “touch-piece” and hung it around the subject’s neck.

The diseased were instructed to wear the coins, known as angels, constantly to ensure success.

Some observers took the view that many of the ill came for the accompanying coin, not the touch.

The deeply cynical said that the petitioners were petty criminals who used the occasions for pickpocketing and worse.

Did the King’s Evil work?

Contemporary scientists, including some on the occult side of the table, tried without success to find an explanation for the effectiveness of the touch.

Of course, it’s possible that the disease went into remission on its own, giving the impression of a royal cure.

The mystique of monarchy was enhanced by the fact that monarchs never caught scrofula, even though they laid their hands upon their diseased subjects.

More than one king confided feeling the pressure of public expectation to his counselors or his day-books.

Luckily, Royal therapeutics were not expected to cure everyone immediately and those who remained ill were usually blamed for lacking faith!

Royal Charisma

royal progress
One of Elizabeth’s royal chaplains, William Tooker, wrote “Charisma, or the Healing Gift” in 1597.

In a colorful passage, Tooker evokes the contrast between the pure, charismatic queen and her unfortunate, diseased subjects.

Tooker wrote that he had seen Elizabeth I with her :

“very beautiful hands, radiant as whitewashed snow, courageously free from all squeamishness, touching their abscesses not with fingertips, but pressing hard and repeatedly with wholesome results”.

Tooker, Elizabeth and others believed these healing acts were evidence not only of a special divine gift but also of the validity of her succession.

The demonologist Pierre de Lancre boasted that even dead French monarchs could heal.

It was still believed in the 16th century Saint Louis IX’s arm could still heal, preserved in Poblet Monastery in Catalonia.

The King’s Evil ceremony

King's_evil;_Edward_the_confessor_touching_for_the_evil._Wellcome_M0011314

Henry VII (r. 1485–1509) firmly formalized the process. It consisted of four distinct elements:

    1. The monarch touched or stroked the face or neck of the infected person.

 

    1. The monarch hung the medal around the person’s neck.

 

    1. Passages from the Gospel of Mark (16: 14–20) and the Gospel of John (1: 1–14) were read. Mark 16 contains themes that confirm monarchs’ immunity to infectious diseases: “They shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover.” Mark 16:18

 

    1. Prayers were offered. Until the English Reformation, the prayers were addressed not only to God but also to Virgin Mary and the saints.

 

By the middle of the 16th century those who wanted access to public healing had initially to undergo a medical examination by a royal surgeon to ensure that they did indeed have scrofula.

The ceremony was at its most popular during the Restoration, with Charles II touching an average of 4,000 people each year until the 1680s, when both he and James II administered some 6,000 a year.

These huge figures are even more astonishing when it is recalled that between 1530 and 1532 Henry VIII is recorded as having touched just sixty-five scrofulous sufferers.

Medicine and Scrofula

Kings had no monopoly on curing Scrofula.

Doctors prescribed medicine; surgeons operated on scrofulous tumors; healers administered remedies and charms.

Sometimes the royal touch was the last resort for especially hard-to-treat cases.

John Morley describes in 1781 how he cured a young boy of this “grevious and obstinate disease”:

In the 18th century, Mrs. Elizabeth Pearson, an Irish herbalist, proposed a treatment for scrofula involving herbs, a poultice and extract of vegetable.

In the 19th century United States, Swaim’s Panacea was advertised as a scrofula cure.

Nancy_Linton

The panacea contained mercury and Linton’s appearance above seems to show signs of mercury poisoning. Even though they brag that this is her “actual appearance” after being cured!

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