One day in the late 1840s, Princess Alexandra Amelie, the 23-year-old daughter of the recently abdicated King Ludwig I of Bavaria, was making her way through the corridors of the family palace. Her relatives noticed that the obsessive, highly intelligent young woman鈥攚ho only wore the color white鈥攚as acting even stranger than usual. Alexandra Amelie was through doorways and labyrinthine hallways, tiptoeing and carefully turning her body so that nothing would touch her.

When what she was doing, the Princess explained that she had just discovered something remarkable. As a child, she had swallowed a full-sized grand piano made entirely of glass. It now resided inside her鈥攚holly intact鈥攁nd would shatter if faced with any sudden movement.

Surprisingly, Alexandra Amelie鈥檚 odd fixation was not an unheard-of disorder. The princess was, in fact, following in a long tradition of royals, nobles and scholars who believed that all or certain parts of their bodies were made of clear, fragile glass. Known as 鈥渢he glass delusion,鈥 this psychological malady, first recorded in the Middle Ages, would become quite common before virtually dying out in the late 19th century. It was so well known that it would be mentioned by , Denis Diderot and in scholar Robert Burton鈥檚 1621 medical compendium, .

Alexandra Amelie, daughter of Ludwig I of Bavaria.
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Alexandra Amelie, daughter of Ludwig I of Bavaria. (Credit: DeAgostini/Getty Images)

One of the first recorded patients to suffer from this delusion was probably its most famous victim. (1368鈥1422) had ascended the throne of France at the age of 11. Handsome, judicial and charismatic, he had spearheaded reform efforts after taking over from his corrupt regents in 1388鈥攕treamlining the royal bureaucracy and surrounding himself with enlightened advisors. These actions led him to be nicknamed Charles 鈥渢he beloved.鈥 But in 1392, he suffered a psychotic break (believed to be his first manifestation of schizophrenia), which would lead to sporadic and periods of inertia and confusion for the rest of his life.

Charles 鈥渢he beloved,鈥 was now known as Charles 鈥渢he mad.鈥 Allegedly, the king had spells where . To keep himself from 鈥渟hattering,鈥 Charles would stay motionless for hours, wrapped in piles of thick blankets. When he did have to move, he did so in a special garment, which included iron 鈥渞ibs鈥 to protect his glass organs.

King Charles VI of France in his bedchamber with servants and ministers.
Hulton Archive/Getty Images
King Charles VI of France in his bedchamber with servants and ministers. (Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Over the next few centuries, the delusion spread to the courts, monasteries and universities of Europe. , , two notable 16th-century doctors鈥擜lfonso Ponce de Santa Cruz, the physician to , and Andre du Laurens, physician to 鈥攖old the story of an unnamed royal who believed he was not a human, but a glass vase. According to du Laurens, the nobleman was otherwise highly intelligent and well spoken.

The royal spent much of his time lying on a bed of straw to protect himself. Fed up, the man鈥檚 physician ordered that his bed of straw be set on fire and that the door to the man鈥檚 room be locked. When the man began to beat on the door begging for help, the doctor asked him why he wasn鈥檛 shattering despite the violent movements. The ploy worked. 鈥淥pen, I am begging you, my friends and dearest servants,鈥 , according to PhD candidate Elena Fabietti, whose work focuses on the cultural history of transparent humans. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I am a glass vase but just the most miserable of all men; especially if you will let this 铿乺e put an end to my life.鈥

There are recorded references throughout the Middle Ages and into the 17th century of people who believed they possessed glass hearts, feet and heads. Others thought they were actually glass flasks. Men seem to have had a certain predilection for glass buttocks, which would shatter if they sat down without a pillow strapped to their behinds. Nicole du Plessis, a relation of France鈥檚 all-powerful Cardinal Richelieu, . Another man believing he possessed a glass rear end was beaten by his doctor, in the hopes he would realize it was his flesh that was sore from the thrashing.

Human heart made of glass.
Sebastian Kaulitzki/Alamy Stock Photo
Human heart made of glass. (Credit: Sebastian Kaulitzki/Alamy Stock Photo)

Many who suffered from a glass delusion, including Princess Alexandra Amelie and King Charles VI, were considered exceptional people of great intelligence and ingenuity. Depictions of unusually clever victims of the disorder popped up in popular plays and literature over the centuries, most notably in 鈥 short story El licenciado Vidriera  (known variously in English as , Doctor Glass-Case and The Glass Lawyer), published in 1613. In it, a brilliant young lawyer called Tomas Rodaja is the victim of a love potion that causes him to believe he is made of glass. He renames himself Vidriera (window) and gives honest counsel to many, :

鈥淗e asked people to address him from a distance, and he said that they might ask what questions they liked, because he was a man of glass, not 铿俥sh, and since glass is of subtle and delicate matter, the soul works through it with more speed and efficiency than through the material of the normal body, which is heavy and earthy.鈥

So what exactly was the cause of this peculiar manifestation of mental illness? Scholars at the time, including Burton, attributed it to the now discredited diagnosis of melancholy鈥攁 kind of noble depression, often linked to aristocracy and genius. In the case of royals, contemporary psychologists speculate that believing one was glass how vulnerable, fragile and exposed they felt in their public positions. It was a way of expressing humanity, sensitivity and perhaps a desire to be left alone.

鈥淗e shouted in the most terrible way,鈥 Cervantes wrote in El licenciado Vidriera, 鈥渂egging and pleading with predetermined words and expressions that no one come near because they would break him, that he really and truly was not like other men, that he was all glass from head to toe.鈥

Interestingly, at the time, glass鈥攑articularly clear glass鈥, mostly found in royal palaces, churches and government buildings. , a historian of psychiatry at the University of Toronto, fixations with innovative materials have been reported throughout history. Before the glass delusion, there were people who believed their bodies were composed of earthenware, and during the 19th century, people started to believe they were made of the dominant construction material of the day: concrete. Our modern-day delusions tend to involve technology: sufferers may believe the government has planted a microchip in their brain or that a computer is constantly monitoring them.

What people with these delusions have in common is that they all feel fragile. Indeed, when the author Giovanni Boccaccio was despairingly called a 鈥渕an of glass鈥 in 1393, he responded with a retort that could be understood by every human鈥攆rom a high-born princess to a lowly pauper, notes in .

鈥淲e are all glass men, subjected to innumerable dangers,鈥 in a written response to his critic. 鈥淭he slightest touch would break us, and we would return to nothing.鈥