Background: The term "hysteria" is now recognized to refer to non-organic and functional disorders. Jean-Martin Charcot once attempted to identify the lesions responsible for hysteria as an organic disorder in his later years, but his effort failed. He classi ed hysteria as usual and grand. Grand hysteria was also called hystero-epilepsy, which became obsolete after Charcot's death and has been an enigma in modern neurology. After anti-NMDA receptor (NMDAR) encephalitis was established in the twenty-rst century, a paradigm shift emerged in the interpretation of acute onset of neuropsychiatric symptoms. Patients with anti-NMDAR encephalitis demonstrate a characteristic multistage progression and stereotypical movements, including opisthotonic posture, which are analogous to the staging progressions and ' arc de cercle' observed in Charcot's hystero-epilepsy.Methods: To elucidate the full picture of Charcot's hystero-epilepsy, we reviewed the patients presented in "the Tuesday Lessons".Results: Eleven patients were shown to have hystero-epilepsy by Charcot himself. Of the 11 patients, 4 patients had acute-onset neuropsychiatric symptoms, and 2 patients had a condition that resembled anti-NMDAR encephalitis. Although the clinical courses were similar to those of anti-NMDAR encephalitis, we could not make conclusive diagnoses of anti-NMDAR encephalitis without examinations due to the lack of evidence of teratomas. One patient with alcohol withdrawal syndrome and one patient with chronic pain and morphine withdrawal syndrome were also classi ed as having hystero-epilepsy by Charcot. The other patients, who manifested chronic courses or varying hypnosis-induced neurological symptoms, could be diagnosed with conversion and dissociative disorders today.Conclusions: Charcot's hystero-epilepsy has been suspected of being a syndrome encompassing conversion and dissociative disorders, drug withdrawal syndrome, and anti-NMDAR encephalitis-like manifestations. Charcot's observations combined with the current progress in molecular biology suggest that a common dysfunctional basis exists, such as glutamate/NMDAR system dysfunction, among these conditions.