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I have added some info regarding the power of healing. There have been many 'natural born healers' in the history of mankind. Magnetism has been said being the main attribute of these blessed people. CHITRANI-08 jAN/06-21.12 (GMT+1)
You can't say he had healing powers. Anything supporting the view that it's possible to heal people mysitcally does not belong on Wikipedia as it has no factual evidence.
This is absolute rubbish, and completely ahistorical.
I do not think he was born in Affane but had an estate there. I have a reference to say he was born in Devon at Stoke Gabriel in a letter by Herbert Phaire
— Preceding unsigned comment added by Streona ( talk • contribs) 15:26, 17 May 2010
Text taken form the source mentioned above
Extracts from the Port-folio of a Man of Letters |
---|
VALENTINE CREATRAKS. Extracts of Letters from Mr. Herbert ander Phairc, of St. John's, near Enniseorthy in the County of Wexford, in Ireland, relating to Mr. Greatraks, [1] the famous Irish Stroker.—From the Originals in the British Museum. February 29, 1743/4[see Old Style and New Style dates MR. Valentine Greatraks was born at Stoke Gabriei,in Devonshire, where he had an estate, which he fold, and then lived and died at his estate of Afftne, within a mile of Ctppoqueen, in the county of Waterfoid. He was the eldest son, and educated at Oxford. There is some account of him in A. Wocd's Athtnæ Oxon. He was a lieutenant of horse (I think) in Ludlow't Troop, He was a man of great parts, and strictly virtuous. He married the sister of Sir William Godolphin, who was King Charles the Second's Ambassador at Madrid. He had but two childien, both sons. The eldest, William, married Col. Wheeler's daughter, in the Queen's County, and died soon after. The second, Edmund (after Sir Edmundbury Godfrey) married the daughter of a glassman in Bistol, and died soon after. There is one of the name, a distant relation, that now lives at Affane, where Mr. Gieairaks one night dreamed thrice, that he had virtue in his hands; and next morning seeing a man fail down as dead with the epilepsy, he stroaked, and recovered him instantly. This was his first patient. He grew so famous that his court was filled with diseased every morning, which he always spent in their favour. Wherever he went, a great throng attended him, most of whom he cured; but he would never touch any that looked venereal, saying, he took that to be a just judgment for their sins. All disorders were not obedient to his touch, but he failed in few. My father, who had the least implicit faith of any man, had a violent fever, and Mr. Greatraks turned it away in two minutes. He had, at another time, a terrible ague, which, when the fit struck him, Mr. Greatraks cured in a minute or two, by holding him by the wrists ; and he never had a fit after. Mr. Greatraks also cured a sister of mine of the king's evil, by stroaking. March 1743/4 March 10, 173/4) |
-- PBS ( talk) 21:15, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
As to where he was born one of the letters states "MR. Valentine Greatraks was born at Stoke Gabriei, in Devonshire" Elmer 2013, p. 17 states that he was born in New Affane, County Waterford, Munster (Ireland) to a Protestant settler family. -- PBS ( talk) 16:54, 30 November 2013 (UTC)
References
I have expanded the article using the PD text in:
{{
cite book}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1=
(
help)However this text was published in 1779 and will need checking and modifying against modern texts. I have cited one for his death (it was previously in external links) and the rest of the text needs checking against sources such as this:
I will leave that task to someone else
-- PBS ( talk) 20:36, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
This article says 1682 while wikidata says 1683. One must be wrong. MB 19:14, 18 July 2021 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated Stub-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
I have added some info regarding the power of healing. There have been many 'natural born healers' in the history of mankind. Magnetism has been said being the main attribute of these blessed people. CHITRANI-08 jAN/06-21.12 (GMT+1)
You can't say he had healing powers. Anything supporting the view that it's possible to heal people mysitcally does not belong on Wikipedia as it has no factual evidence.
This is absolute rubbish, and completely ahistorical.
I do not think he was born in Affane but had an estate there. I have a reference to say he was born in Devon at Stoke Gabriel in a letter by Herbert Phaire
— Preceding unsigned comment added by Streona ( talk • contribs) 15:26, 17 May 2010
Text taken form the source mentioned above
Extracts from the Port-folio of a Man of Letters |
---|
VALENTINE CREATRAKS. Extracts of Letters from Mr. Herbert ander Phairc, of St. John's, near Enniseorthy in the County of Wexford, in Ireland, relating to Mr. Greatraks, [1] the famous Irish Stroker.—From the Originals in the British Museum. February 29, 1743/4[see Old Style and New Style dates MR. Valentine Greatraks was born at Stoke Gabriei,in Devonshire, where he had an estate, which he fold, and then lived and died at his estate of Afftne, within a mile of Ctppoqueen, in the county of Waterfoid. He was the eldest son, and educated at Oxford. There is some account of him in A. Wocd's Athtnæ Oxon. He was a lieutenant of horse (I think) in Ludlow't Troop, He was a man of great parts, and strictly virtuous. He married the sister of Sir William Godolphin, who was King Charles the Second's Ambassador at Madrid. He had but two childien, both sons. The eldest, William, married Col. Wheeler's daughter, in the Queen's County, and died soon after. The second, Edmund (after Sir Edmundbury Godfrey) married the daughter of a glassman in Bistol, and died soon after. There is one of the name, a distant relation, that now lives at Affane, where Mr. Gieairaks one night dreamed thrice, that he had virtue in his hands; and next morning seeing a man fail down as dead with the epilepsy, he stroaked, and recovered him instantly. This was his first patient. He grew so famous that his court was filled with diseased every morning, which he always spent in their favour. Wherever he went, a great throng attended him, most of whom he cured; but he would never touch any that looked venereal, saying, he took that to be a just judgment for their sins. All disorders were not obedient to his touch, but he failed in few. My father, who had the least implicit faith of any man, had a violent fever, and Mr. Greatraks turned it away in two minutes. He had, at another time, a terrible ague, which, when the fit struck him, Mr. Greatraks cured in a minute or two, by holding him by the wrists ; and he never had a fit after. Mr. Greatraks also cured a sister of mine of the king's evil, by stroaking. March 1743/4 March 10, 173/4) |
-- PBS ( talk) 21:15, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
As to where he was born one of the letters states "MR. Valentine Greatraks was born at Stoke Gabriei, in Devonshire" Elmer 2013, p. 17 states that he was born in New Affane, County Waterford, Munster (Ireland) to a Protestant settler family. -- PBS ( talk) 16:54, 30 November 2013 (UTC)
References
I have expanded the article using the PD text in:
{{
cite book}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1=
(
help)However this text was published in 1779 and will need checking and modifying against modern texts. I have cited one for his death (it was previously in external links) and the rest of the text needs checking against sources such as this:
I will leave that task to someone else
-- PBS ( talk) 20:36, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
This article says 1682 while wikidata says 1683. One must be wrong. MB 19:14, 18 July 2021 (UTC)