thumb|right|A hand of glory on display at [[Whitby Museum]]

A Hand of Glory is the dried and pickled hand of a hanged man, often specified as being the left () hand, or, if the person was hanged for murder, the hand that "did the deed."

Old European beliefs attribute great powers to a Hand of Glory. The process for preparing the hand and the candle are described in 18th-century documents, with certain steps disputed due to difficulty in properly translating phrases from that era. The concept has inspired short stories and poems since the 19th century.

History of the term

Etymologist Walter Skeat reports that, while folklore has long attributed mystical powers to a dead man's hand, the specific phrase Hand of Glory is in fact a folk etymology: it derives from the French ', a corruption of mandragore, which is to say mandrake. Skeat writes, "The identification of the hand of glory with the mandrake is clinched by the statement in Cockayne's Leechdoms, i. 245, that the mandrake 'shineth by night altogether like a lamp. Cockayne in turn is quoting Pseudo-Apuleius, in a translation of a Saxon manuscript of his '. The candle could be put out only with milk.

thumb|A hand of glory on a mantlepiece, in a detail of the 1565 artwork The Elder Saint Jacob Visiting the Magician Hermogenes by [[Pieter van der Heyden]]

The Hand of Glory also purportedly had the power to unlock any door it came across. The method of making a Hand of Glory is described in ', and in the '.

Process

thumb|A papier-mâché hand of glory

The 1722 ' describes in detail how to make a Hand of Glory, as cited from him by Émile-Jules Grillot de Givry:

In the French 1752 edition (called ', i.e., "New Edition, corrected and augmented"), however, this reads as "", that is, in Francis Grose's translation from 1787, "sisame of Lapland", or Lapland sesame. This interpretation can be found many places on the Internet, and even in books published at university presses. Two books, one by Cora Daniels, another by Montague Summers, perpetuate the Lapland sesame myth, while being uncertain whether zimat should mean verdigris or the Arabian sulphate of iron.

The ' also provides a way to shield a house from the effects of the Hand of Glory:

An actual Hand of Glory is kept at the Whitby Museum in North Yorkshire, England, together with a text published in a book from 1823. In this manuscript text, the way to make the Hand of Glory is as follows:

Pop Culture

In Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets a hand of glory is seen on display in Borgin and Burke's, credited with producing candlelight which only the holder can see.

In Lady Midnight the Warlock Malcolm Fade tries resurrecting his late lover with a dozen hands of glory.

In The Laundry Files, the Hand of Glory is a common piece of equipment, depicted as causing a user to become imperceptible when the fingertips are set alight, or firing blasts of energy when a phase conjugate mirror is affixed to the base and a pre-programmed trigger phrase is concentrated upon by the user. The creation of a Hand of Glory is depicted as using the self-defence reflex of extra-dimensional parasites, and thus only requiring a nerve-dense limb. Consequently, most Hands of Glory depicted in the series are those of pigeons.

See also

  • Order of the Occult Hand
  • The Monkey's Paw

References

  • The Hand of Glory and other gory legends about human hands – Edited by D. L. Ashliman.