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“Would I Could Give You Help and Succour”: Elizabeth I and the Politics of Touch

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 July 2014

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In 1462, in defense of the House of Lancaster, Sir John Fortescue wrote that Edward IV could not cure the king's evil, the disease scrofula, by touching the afflicted since to do so one must not only be a king but also a legitimate one. To touch one needed not only to be annointed with holy oil but the person must also be the legitimate heir. Lancastrians claimed that Edward IV could not touch since he was not the rightful king. Wrote Fortescue, he “wrongly claims to enjoy this wonderful privilege. Wrongly … [because] this unction is powerless because Edward had no right to receive it.” Sir John goes on to argue by analogy, and scornfully asks: “Would a woman who received ordination thereby become a priest?” Of course not. Continuing this line of argument, Fortescue adds that a usurper would not be the only one unable to cure by touch.

Many duties likewise are incumbent on the kings of England in virtue of the kingly office, which are inconsistent with a woman's nature, and kings of England are endowed with certain powers by special grace from heaven, wherewith queens in the same country are not endowed. The kings of England by touch of their annointed hands they cleanse and cure those inflected with a certain disease, that is commonly called the King's Evil, though they be pronounced otherwise incurable. This gift is not bestowed on Queens.

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Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference on British Studies 1989

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References

1 The king's evil was the disease scrofula, a tubercular inflammation of the lymph glands of the neck. I am deeply grateful to Professor Clark Hulse and Professor Dennis Moore for their help when I began this project. Most of the research for this essay was accomplished when I was a Monticello Foundation Fellow at the Newberry Library, 1987 and I would like to express my appreciation to the Newberry Library for all their support. Professor Howard Solomon and Professor Retha Warnicke read this essay in draft. Their comments were most valuable. I would also like to thank Professor Elaine Kruse, Rozalyn Levin, Joseph Silvestri, and Beverly Behrman for their help in preparing this manuscript for publication.

2 Bloch, Marc, The Royal Touch: Sacred Monarchy and Scrofula in England and France, trans. by Anderson, J. E. (London, 1973), p. 130.Google Scholar

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5 The practice was popular in 15th century France. Louis XI touched for the Evil once a week, always after first going to confession (Crawfurd, , The King's Evil, p. 48Google Scholar).

6 Crawfurd, , The King's Evil, p. 47Google Scholar; Bloch, , The Royal Touch, pp. 92107Google Scholar; Thomas, , Religion and the Decline of Magic, pp. 198–99Google Scholar. Ives discusses how valued were cramp rings in the reign of Henry VIII. Ives, Eric W., Anne Boleyn (Oxford, 1986), p. 138Google Scholar. Many amulets were used in this period to try and protect a pregnancy. See Eccles, Audrey, Obstetrics and Gynaecology in Tudor and Stuart England (Kent, Ohio, 1982)Google Scholar, Tucker, M. J., “The Child as Beginning and End: Fifteenth and Sixteenth Century English Childhood,” in DeMause, Lloyd, ed., The History of Childhood (New York, 1974), pp. 229257Google Scholar, and McLaren, Angus, Reproductive Rituals: The perception of fertility in England from the Sixteenth to the Nineteenth Century (London and New York, 1984).Google Scholar

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11 The New Catholic Encyclopedia (New York, 1967), 7: 105–07Google Scholar; 9: 146; Hole, , British Folk Customs, p. 169Google Scholar. See also, Charlton, William, “Maundy Thursday Observances: the Royal Maundy Money,” Transactions of the Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society (1916): 201–19.Google Scholar

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14 Though others besides the king did it, including the Earl of Northumberland in 1511 and Cardinal Thomas Wolsey in 1530. Elizabeth of York and Catherine of Aragon both distributed money on Maundy Thursday. There is no evidence that they actually washed the feet of the poor (Robinson, , The Royal Maundy, p. 26Google Scholar). Catherine of Aragon struggled over this issue after the divorce, since Henry decreed she could only hold a Maundy as princess dowager, not queen. This is discussed in a letter from Sir William Fitzwilliam, Treasurer of Henry VIII's Household to Thomas Cromwell (Ellis, Henry, ed., Original Letters, Illustrative of English History, 2 vols. 2nd ed. (London, 1825), 2: 2528Google Scholar).

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17 James II was probably the last monarch to perform the footwashing, though some historians claim that William III performed a modified version of the ritual. Though the ritual is still carried out today, after the end of the 17th century monarchs did not distribute their own gifts of money, food, and clothing until George V restored the custom in 1932. Elizabeth II distributes to both men and women, each group numbering her age. The last monarch to touch for the king's evil was Queen Anne.

18 Crawfurd, , King's Evil, p. 64.Google Scholar

19 Greenblatt, Stephen, “Invisible bullets: Renaissance authority and its subversion, Henry IV and Henry V,” in Political Shakespeare: New Essays in Cultural Materialism, Dollimore, Jonathan and Sinfield, Alan, eds. (Manchester, 1985), p. 44Google Scholar. For a discussion of this issue in general, see Orgel, Stephen, The Illusion of Power: Political Theatre in the English Renaissance (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1975)Google Scholar, idem, “Making Greatness Familiar,” The Power of Forms in the English Renaissance, Stephen Greenblatt, ed. (Norman, Okla., 1982), pp. 41–47, Tennenhouse, Leonard, Power on Display: The Politics of Shakespeare's Genres (London and New York, 1986)Google Scholar, Mullaney, Steven, The Place of the Stage: Licence, Play, and Power in Renaissance England (Chicago and London, 1988)Google Scholar, and the works already cited by Strong. Some sociologists, of the school of Emile Durkheim, argue in a positive theory of ritual that “religious beliefs and practices not only create and sustain the fundamental social structure of a society, but maintain the members' sense of reality” (Scheff, T. J., Catharsis in Healing, Ritual, and Drama [Berkeley, 1979], p. 111Google Scholar).

20 Robinson, , The Royal Maundy, p. 16.Google Scholar

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23 I am indebted to Professor Dennis Moore for this reference.

24 Thomas, , Religion and the Decline of Magic, p. 199.Google Scholar

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28 Strong, , Art and Power, pp. 6970.Google Scholar

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30 This is another term for scrofula.

31 Crawfurd, , The King's Evil, p. 75.Google Scholar

32 Clowes, William, A right frutefull treatise for the artificiall cure of struma (London, 1602), pp. 4950.Google Scholar

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35 Tooker gives this testimony, see Crawfurd, , The King's Evil, pp. 75.Google Scholar

36 A colleague, anthropologist Karin Andriolo, has suggested that Elizabeth may have refused to touch because she might have been menstruating (see Delaney, Janice, Lupton, Mary Jane, and Toth, Emily, The Curse: A Cultural History of Menstruation [Urbana and Chicago, 1988], p. 42Google Scholar, and Eccles, , Obstetrics and Gynaecology in Tudor and Stuart England, pp. 4951Google Scholar). For non-Western attitudes on menstruation, see Douglas, Mary, Purity and Danger: An Analysis of Concepts of Pollution and Taboo (New York, 1966), pp. 147, 151, 176–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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40 This description is taken from William Lambarde's eye witness account of Elizabeth's 1572–73 Maundy. Nichols, John, The Progresses and Public Processions of Queen Elizabeth (London, 1823; new ed., 3 vols.; New York, n.d.), 2: 325–27.Google Scholar

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47 James had not touched while king of Scotland as the ceremony had never taken hold there. He may have performed a Maundy service, though it is doubtful since the Scots Presbyterians probably believed it too popish. His father, Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, did perform a Maundy during the brief time he was king of Scotland after his marriage to Mary Stuart. De Silva mentions it in a letter of 29 April 1566 (CSP, Spain, 1: 546Google Scholar).

48 Mullaney, , The Place of the Stage, p. 105.Google Scholar

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50 See Montrose, Louis, “The Elizabethan Subject and the Spenserian Text,” in Literary Theory/Renaissance Texts, Parker, Patricia and Quilts, David, eds. (Baltimore, 1986), pp. 303–40Google Scholar, and Shaping Fantasies: Figurations of Gender and Power in Elizabethan Culture,” Representations 1, 2 (1983): 6194Google Scholar. See also, Levin, Carole, “Queens and Claimants: Political Insecurity in Sixteenth Century England,” in Gender, Ideology, and Action: Women's Public Lives in Historical Perspective, Sharistanian, Janet, ed. (New York, 1986).Google Scholar