Tellurism

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Tellurism

A name applied by Dietrich G. Kieser (1779-1862) to animal magnetism. He was one of the early scientific investigators who supported the reality of the phenomenon and drew attention to its legal aspects. "Téméraire," Charles (or Charles the Bold ) (1433-1477)

Duke of Burgundy (1467-1477) in the fifteenth century. During his reign the state enjoyed its height of political, economic, and cultural power. According to legend, he disappeared after the battle of Morat on June 22, 1477, when he was defeated. It was said by his chroniclers that he was carried off by the devil; others maintained that he had withdrawn to a remote spot and become a hermit.

More sober accounts state, however, that he perished in the battle and that his mutilated body was discovered several days later. Charles was introduced into two novels by Sir Walter Scott Quentin Durward and Anne of Geirstein. The latter novel contains an account of the battle of Nancy, before the fatal encounter at Morat.