The vast amount of documentation available on the Convulsionnaires, even just on the internet, is daunting. I was quite pleased, therefore, to find a couple of old books in English which contain summaries and translations of some of the more famous cases, mostly taken from Montgeron. Both are based largely on the work of the famous psychiatrist Louis-Florentin Calmeil (1798-1895), author of De la folie (1845); Calmeil's basic thesis was the existence of a pathological state he called a théomanie extaso-convulsive. His selection from the sources includes the Protestants of the Cévenne is inevitably biased towards the sensational, but the passages are genuine enough. Most, but not all, the examples involve supposed miraculous cures.
CATHERINE BIGOT
Catherine Bigot, a deaf-mute, was one of the earliest cases
to exhibit convulsionary symptoms.
"On the 27th of August, 1731,
Montgeron relates, they conducted to the cemetery of Saint Médard, a young
girl, deaf and dumb from her birth. As soon as she was placed on the tomb, she
fell into most terrible convulsions, accompanied with a great perspiration, and
manifested, by her gestures, that she was suffering principally in her head, in
the throat, and the ears. After the attack, she remained as if dead, and they
were obliged to remove her from the tomb. Having, in some degree, recovered her
senses, she gave them to understand, by signs, that she wished to be placed
again on the tomb, which was accordingly done. The convulsions immediately
recommenced with more violence than before, and they carried her away a second
time, to enable her to breathe. They yielded again to the desire she evinced,
to be brought back to the tomb-stone of the deacon; the convulsions returned,
and they were forced to carry away the patient to her own home, where she
remained until nine o'clock at night, violently agitated with convulsive
movements.
The 28th of August, 1731, she
made a second visit to the sepulchre of the Deacon Paris, and the result was a
return of the convulsions, which were only allayed at the end of the day. The
29th and the 30th of August, after a kind of swooning, the young invalid
found she was able to hear and speak, but, it is said, without understanding
the sense of the words which struck upon her ear." (See Montgeron, vol. 2, p. 10f)
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=kzgl6Ois5qEC&pg=PA52-IA35#v=onepage&q&f=false