Jump to content

Charles Lloyd Tuckey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles Lloyd Tuckey
Born(1854-02-14)14 February 1854
Canterbury, United Kingdom
Died12 August 1925(1925-08-12) (aged 71)
EducationKing's School, Canterbury
Alma materKing's College London, Aberdeen University
Occupation(s)Physician, Hypnotherapist
Known forReintroducing medical hypnotism to the United Kingdom
Notable workPsycho-Therapeutics: Treatment by Hypnotism and Suggestion

Charles Lloyd Tuckey (14 February 1854 – 12 August 1925) was an English physician, who with John Milne Bramwell, is widely credited with reintroducing medical hypnotism or hypnotherapy to the United Kingdom in the late nineteenth-century.[1] He was born in Canterbury and educated at King's School, Canterbury before attending medical school at King's College London and Aberdeen University. He went on to practice medicine in London. In 1888, after visiting Ambroise-Auguste Liébeault in France and Drs Frederik van Eeden and Albert van Renterghem in Amsterdam he took up medical hypnotism despite its fringe status. He was a member of the New Hypnotists, a loosely knit group of British physicians who actively promoted medical hypnotism despite institutional opposition.[2] Other members included John Milne Bramwell, Robert Felkin and George Kingsbury.

He wrote seven editions of the highly influential textbook, Psycho-Therapeutics: Treatment by Hypnotism and Suggestion between 1889 and 1920.[3] He treated the American diarist Alice James using hypnotism for the pain and insomnia resulting from her breast cancer.[4]: 190  He was a member of the Society for Psychical Research from 1889 to 1922, investigated hypnotic phenomena as chair of the organisation's Hypnotism committee and sat on the council from 1897 till his retirement.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Bates, Gordon David Lyle (2024). "Charles Lloyd Tuckey: medical hypnotist and 'amiable necromancer'". History of Psychiatry. 35 (2): 215-225. https://doi.org/10.1177/0957154x231221047
  2. ^ Bates, Gordon David Lyle (2023). The Uncanny Rise of Medical Hypnotism, 1888-1914: Between Imagination and Suggestion. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  3. ^ Tuckey, Charles Lloyd (1890). Psycho-Therapeutics (2nd ed.). London: Ballière, Tindall & Cox.
  4. ^ James, Alice (1981). Yeazell, Ruth (ed.). The Death and Letters of Alice James. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
[edit]

Media related to Charles Lloyd Tuckey at Wikimedia Commons