The Epidemics of the Middle Ages by J. F. C. Hecker and John Caius
5. The appearance of the _Convulsionnaires_ in France, whose
1137 words | Chapter 33
inhabitants, from the greater mobility of their blood, have in
general been the less liable to fanaticism, is, in this respect,
instructive and worthy of attention. In the year 1727 there died, in
the capital of that country, the Deacon Pâris, a zealous opposer of the
Ultramontanists, division having arisen in the French church on account
of the bull “Unigenitus.” People made frequent visits to his tomb, in
the cemetery of St. Medard, and four years afterwards, (in September,
1731,) a rumour was spread, that miracles took place there. Patients
were seized with convulsions and tetanic spasms, rolled upon the ground
like persons possessed, were thrown into violent contortions of their
heads and limbs, and suffered the greatest oppression, accompanied by
quickness and irregularity of pulse. This novel occurrence excited
the greatest sensation all over Paris, and an immense concourse of
people resorted daily to the above named cemetery, in order to see
so wonderful a spectacle, which the Ultramontanists immediately
interpreted as a work of Satan, while their opponents ascribed it to a
divine influence. The disorder soon increased, until it produced, in
nervous women, _clairvoyance_, (_Schlafwachen_,) a phenomenon till then
unknown; for one female especially attracted attention, who blindfold,
and, as it was believed, by means of the sense of smell, read every
writing that was placed before her, and distinguished the characters of
unknown persons. The very earth taken from the grave of the Deacon, was
soon thought to possess miraculous power. It was sent to numerous sick
persons at a distance, whereby they were said to have been cured, and
thus this nervous disorder spread far beyond the limits of the capital,
so that at one time it was computed that there were more than eight
hundred decided _Convulsionnaires_, who would hardly have increased
so much in numbers, had not Louis XV. directed that the cemetery
should be closed[330]. The disorder itself assumed various forms,
and augmented, by its attacks, the general excitement. Many persons,
besides suffering from the convulsions, became the subjects of violent
pain, which required the assistance of their brethren of the faith. On
this account they, as well as those who afforded them aid, were called
by the common title of _Secourists_. The modes of relief adopted were
remarkably in accordance with those which were administered to the
St. John’s dancers and the Tarantati, and they were in general very
rough; for the sufferers were beaten and goaded in various parts of
the body with stones, hammers, swords, clubs, &c., of which treatment
the defenders of this extraordinary sect relate the most astonishing
examples, in proof that severe pain is imperatively demanded by nature
in this disorder, as an effectual counter-irritant. The Secourists used
wooden clubs, in the same manner as paviors use their mallets, and it
is stated that some Convulsionnaires have borne daily from six to eight
thousand blows, thus inflicted, without danger[331]. One Secourist
administered to a young woman, who was suffering under spasm of the
stomach, the most violent blows on that part, not to mention other
similar cases, which occurred everywhere in great numbers. Sometimes
the patients bounded from the ground, impelled by the convulsions,
like fish when out of water; and this was so frequently imitated at a
later period, that the women and girls, when they expected such violent
contortions, not wishing to appear indecent, put on gowns, made like
sacks, closed at the feet. If they received any bruises by falling
down, they were healed with earth from the grave of the uncanonized
saint. They usually, however, showed great agility in this respect,
and it is scarcely necessary to remark that the female sex especially
was distinguished by all kinds of leaping, and almost inconceivable
contortions of body. Some spun round on their feet with incredible
rapidity, as is related of the dervishes; others ran their heads
against walls, or curved their bodies like rope-dancers, so that their
heels touched their shoulders.
All this degenerated at length into decided insanity. A certain
Convulsionnaire, at Vernon, who had formerly led rather a loose course
of life, employed herself in confessing the other sex; in other places
women of this sect were seen imposing exercises of penance on priests,
during which these were compelled to kneel before them. Others played
with children’s rattles, or drew about small carts, and gave to these
childish acts symbolical significations[332]. One Convulsionnaire
even made believe to shave her chin, and gave religious instruction
at the same time, in order to imitate Pâris, the worker of miracles,
who, during this operation, and whilst at table, was in the habit of
preaching. Some had a board placed across their bodies, upon which a
whole row of men stood; and as, in this unnatural state of mind, a
kind of pleasure is derived from excruciating pain, some too were seen
who caused their bosoms to be pinched with tongs, while others, with
gowns closed at the feet, stood upon their heads, and remained in that
position longer than would have been possible had they been in health.
Pinault, the advocate, who belonged to this sect, barked like a dog
some hours every day, and even this found imitation among the believers.
The insanity of the Convulsionnaires lasted, without interruption,
until the year 1790, and during these fifty-nine years, called
forth more lamentable phenomena than the enlightened spirits of the
eighteenth century would be willing to allow. The grossest immorality
found, in the secret meetings of the believers, a sure sanctuary, and,
in their bewildering devotional exercises, a convenient cloak. It was
of no avail that, in the year 1762, the Grands Secours was forbidden by
act of parliament; for thenceforth this work was carried on in secrecy,
and with greater zeal than ever; it was in vain, too, that some
physicians, and, among the rest, the austere, pious Hecquet[333], and
after him Lorry[334], attributed the conduct of the Convulsionnaires
to natural causes. Men of distinction among the upper classes, as,
for instance, Montgeron the deputy, and Lambert an ecclesiastic (obt.
1813), stood forth as the defenders of this sect; and the numerous
writings[335] which were exchanged on the subject, served, by the
importance which they thus attached to it, to give it stability. The
revolution, finally, shook the structure of this pernicious mysticism.
It was not, however, destroyed; for, even during the period of the
greatest excitement, the secret meetings were still kept up; prophetic
books, by Convulsionnaires of various denominations, have appeared
even in the most recent times, and only a few years ago (in 1828) this
once celebrated sect still existed, although without the convulsions
and the extraordinarily rude aid of the brethren of the faith, which,
amidst the boasted pre-eminence of French intellectual advancement,
remind us most forcibly of the dark ages of the St. John’s dancers[336].
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