Palmistry can trace its roots back to Chinese Yijing (I Ching), India in (Hindu) Astrology (known in Sanskrit as Jyotish) and Roma (gypsy) fortune tellers. The Hindu sage Valmiki is thought to have written a book, whose title translates in English as "The Teachings of Valmiki Maharshi on Male Palmistry", comprising 567 stanzas. From India, the art of palmistry spread to China, Tibet, Egypt, Persia and to other countries in Europe[citation needed]. From China, palmistry progressed to Greece[citation needed] where Anaxagoras practiced it. However, modern palmists often combine traditional predictive techniques with psychology, holistic healing, and alternative methods of divination also.
-Captain Casimir Stanislas D'Arpentigny published La Chirognomie in 1839
-Adrien Adolphe Desbarolles published Les Mysteres de la Main in 1859
-Katherine Saint-Hill founded the Chirological Society of Great Britain in 1889
-Edgar de Valcourt-Vermont (Comte de St Germain) founded the American Chirological Society in 1897
-Count Louis Hamon (Cheiro) published Cheiro's Language of the Hand in 1894
-William Benham published The Laws of Scientific Hand Reading in 1900
-Charlotte Wolff published works from 1936-1969, contributed to scientific chirology
-Noel Jaquin published works from 1925-1958, contributed to scientific chirology
-Arnold Holtzman (Psychodiagnostic Chirology)
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