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The Royal Touch In Early Modern England Politics Medicine And Sin Stephen Brogan

  • SKU: BELL-5529282
The Royal Touch In Early Modern England Politics Medicine And Sin Stephen Brogan
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Royal Touch In Early Modern England Politics Medicine And Sin Stephen Brogan instant download after payment.

Publisher: Royal Historical Society
File Extension: PDF
File size: 24.68 MB
Pages: 248
Author: Stephen Brogan
ISBN: 9780861933372, 0861933370
Language: English
Year: 2015

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The Royal Touch In Early Modern England Politics Medicine And Sin Stephen Brogan by Stephen Brogan 9780861933372, 0861933370 instant download after payment.

The royal touch was the religious healing ceremony at which the monarch stroked the sores on the face and necks of people who had scrofula in order to heal them in imitation of Christ. The rite was practised by all the Tudor and Stuart sovereigns apart from William III, reaching its zenith during the Restoration when some 100,000 people were touched by Charles II and James II. This ground-breaking book, the first devoted to the royal touch for almost a century, integrates political, religious, medical and intellectual history. The custom is analysed from above and below: the royal touch projected monarchical authority, but at the same time the great demand for it created numerous problems for those organising the ceremony. The healing rite is situated in the context of a number of early modern debates, including the cessation of miracles and the nature of the body politic. The book also assesses contemporary attitudes towards the royal touch, from belief through ambivalence to scepticism. Drawing on a wide range of primary sources including images, coins, medals, and playing cards, as well as manuscripts and printed texts,it provides an important new perspective on the evolving relationship between politics, medicine and sin in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England.

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