From the uncertainties that characterise our evaluation of the first
few thousand years of the study of the hand, we are suddenly plunged into a situation
where we have considerable documented evidence of the nature of the actual practice of
handreading. By the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, the study of the hand is widely
accepted within both the popular mind and within intellectual and educated circles.
Consequently we find that there are many treatises and manuscript documents of this period
which contain sections, if not whole chapters, on the subject of chiromancy.