Antiquity According to
1 Samuel in the
Old Testament,
King David feigned madness to
Achish, the king of the
Philistines. Some scholars believe this was not feigned but real
epilepsy, and phrasing in the
Septuagint supports that position.
Odysseus was said to have feigned insanity to avoid participating in the
Trojan War. In China's
Warring States period, military strategist
Sun Bin, while imprisoned by his rival
Pang Juan in the
state of Wei, feigned madness to get Pang to release him, and eventually escaped back to his native
Qi. Eventually, he led Qi troops to defeat Wei troops at the
Battle of Maling, leading Pang to commit suicide. Malingering was recorded in Roman times by the physician
Galen, who reported two cases: one patient simulated
colic to avoid a public meeting, and another feigned an injured knee to avoid accompanying his master on a long journey.
Lucius Junius Brutus, who feigned stupidity, causing the Tarquins to underestimate him as a threat until the time when he was able to drive the Roman people to insurrection.
Ibn al-Haytham, also known as Alhazen, who was ordered by the sixth
Fatimid Caliph,
al-Hakim, to regulate the
flooding of the Nile; he later perceived the insanity and futility of what he was attempting to do and, fearing for his life, feigned madness to avoid the
Caliph's wrath. The Caliph, believing him to be insane, placed him under house arrest rather than execute him for failure. Alhazen remained there until the Caliph's death, thereby escaping punishment for his failure to accomplish a task that had been impossible from the beginning.
Renaissance In 1595, a treatise on feigned diseases was published in
Milan by Giambattista Silvatico. Various phases of malingering () are represented in the etchings and engravings of
Jacques Callot (1592–1635). In his
Elizabethan-era social-climbing manual,
George Puttenham recommends a would-be courtier to have "sickness in his sleeve, thereby to shake off other importunities of greater consequence".
Modern period Although the concept of malingering has existed since time immemorial, the term for malingering was introduced in the 1900s due to those who would feign illness or disability to avoid
military service. In 1943, US Army General
George S. Patton found a soldier in a field hospital with no wounds; the soldier claimed to be suffering from
battle fatigue. Believing the patient was malingering,
Patton flew into a rage and physically assaulted him. The patient had
malarial parasites.
Agnes was the first subject of an in-depth discussion of transgender identity in sociology, published by
Harold Garfinkel in 1967. In the 1950s, Agnes feigned symptoms and lied about almost every aspect of her medical history. Garfinkel concluded that fearing she would be denied access to
sexual reassignment surgery, she had avoided every aspect of her case which would have indicated
gender dysphoria and hidden the fact that she had taken hormone therapy. Physicians observing her feminine appearance therefore concluded she had
testicular feminization syndrome, which legitimized her request for the surgery.
Kamo, a Bolshevik revolutionary, successfully feigned madness when in a German prison in 1909, and then in a Russian prison in 1910. He also assisted two other prisoners in doing the same.
Ephrem the Syrian, a prominent
Christian theologian and writer of
Christian literature, avoided presbyteral
consecration by feigning madness because he thought he was unworthy of it. ==Types==