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The Poisoned Breakfst


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The “Poisoned Breakfast” Legend of Medieval France

A popular historical anecdote claims that in a certain French city during the Middle Ages, married women would slip a small dose of poison into the breakfast they prepared for their husbands each morning. Later, in the evening, when the men returned home, the wives would serve them an antidote, ensuring they remained healthy.

How the Practice Was Supposed to Work 

Morning: Wives added a harmless (or very mild) poison to the husband’s food.

Evening: Upon return, the wife would give the antidote, neutralizing the poison.

If the husband stayed away too long: The antidote would be missed, and the poison’s effects would appear — symptoms like nausea, headaches, depression, vomiting, pain, or shortness of breath.

When he finally returned: The wife would unknowingly “cure” him, and he would feel better within minutes.

Purpose and Effect  The idea was to create the impression that being away from home caused illness and despair, while home and the wife restored health. This was meant to encourage husbands to return promptly, strengthening marital loyalty and domestic order mysuperliving.wordpress.com+1.Historical Context and SkepticismWhile the story is widely told in folktales and popular history, there is no solid historical evidence that this was a widespread or documented practice in medieval France Skeptics Stack Exchange. The Affair of the Poisons (1679–1680) did reveal that poison use was common among French society, but it involved criminal and occult activities, not marital control Britannica. The “poisoned breakfast” tale is more likely a folkloric or apocryphal story than a verified historical fact.SummaryThe “French omen” you refer to is a legendary tale about medieval wives using poison and antidote to keep husbands close. It’s a clever, dramatic story about control and love, but historians generally treat it as a folk tradition rather than a confirmed historical practice.   

 

Gregory

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