Witchcraft Trials in Early
Modern England
By Catherine
Meyrick
‘The early-modern
European witch-hunts were neither orchestrated massacres nor spontaneous
pogroms. Alleged witches were not rounded up at night and summarily killed
extra-judicially or lynched as the victims of mob justice. They were executed
after trial and conviction with full legal process.’
Gregory
J Durston
Crimen
exceptum (2019) p.14
Across Europe, from the fifteenth through to the eighteenth
century, thousands of people, women mainly, were tried and often executed for
witchcraft. The treatment of accusations varied from place to place depending
on the local legal process, even within the British Isles. England had around
500 executions over the period covered by the Witchcraft Acts while in Scotland
more than 1,500 of those accused were executed; Wales
and Ireland had few cases as personal setbacks were more often ascribed to
fairies or the little people than to witches.
Prior to the first English witchcraft Act of 1542, most cases of witchcraft and
sorcery were dealt with by ecclesiastical courts; such cases were infrequent
and punishments were usually penances. Occasionally serious cases did occur
such as that of Margery Jourdemayne, tried for treasonable witchcraft in 1441. She felt
the full weight of the secular court and was burnt at the stake, the usual
punishment for women convicted of treason. Burning was reserved for the crimes
of heresy and, for women, for both high and petty treason (the murder of either
a husband, or a master or mistress).
The 1542 Act defined witchcraft as a felony, a crime punishable by death
at the first offence and forfeiture of goods and chattels. Few, if any, were
prosecuted under this Act which was repealed in 1547. It was replaced in 1563 by An Act Against Conjurations,
Enchantments and Witchcrafts which prescribed the death penalty for invoking evil
spirits or using witchcraft to bring about death. A first offence of using
witchcraft to otherwise harm people or property, to find treasure or lost or
stolen items, or to provoke a person to unlawful love earnt a year’s
imprisonment and six hours in the pillory on market day four times in that
year. Second offences could receive the death penalty. The 1604 Act against Conjuration, Witchcraft and Dealing with Evil
and Wicked Spirits extended the death
penalty to those using witchcraft to harm people in any way as well as
introducing it for the new crimes of covenanting with evil spirits and
taking up the dead from graves for use in witchcraft.
Accusations of witchcraft often arose from ‘misfortune
following anger’—an old woman reputed to be a witch requested charity of a
neighbour, the neighbour refused, the old woman became angry and threatened the
neighbour. Not long after the neighbour, a family member or even some of their
livestock fell inexplicably ill or suffered some other misfortune. Cause and
effect were clear.
The legal process began when the person believing him
or herself to be the victim of witchcraft took their complaint to a Justice of
the Peace(JP). Other neighbours then came forward with more complaints, some
years old. The accused was brought before the JP who examined both accused and witnesses
and recorded their statements. The accused was strongly encouraged to confess.
After taking the depositions, the JP decided whether the
case should be dismissed or the accused should be indicted and committed to
gaol or, in rare occasions, bailed. Depending on the timing of the accusation
and indictment, those accused could spend months in gaol awaiting trial, some
dying before trial as a result of the harsh conditions and the spread of
typhus.
Various tests developed over the period to determine
if the accused was, in fact, a witch. Apart from a witch’s confession or
identification by another known witch, the inability to say the Lord’s Prayer
without mistake, or to only be able to say it in Latin, were considered strong
proofs. Respectable women, often midwives, were brought in to search the
accused for a mark or growth anywhere upon her body that could be considered to
be an extra teat used to suckle her familiar
spirits. These familiars were small creatures
such as cats, rats, dogs, ferrets, birds, frogs and toads believed to assist a
witch in her magic. Depending on the zeal of the women searching, even
conditions such as haemorrhoids might be considered a teat. A common test throughout the whole period of the
operation of the witchcraft Acts was scratching. A person afflicted by a
witch’s magic scratched the suspected witch and drew blood; if this brought
relief, the woman scratched was obviously a witch. Witches were also believed
to have a place, or mark, on their bodies that was insensitive and did not
bleed when pricked with a needle. Witch pricking was common in Scotland but
appears not to have been used in England until the reign of James I. Swimming
involved throwing an accused witch into a body
of water in the belief that if she sank she was innocent, if she floated it was
proof she was a witch. With origins in the disused trial by ordeal, swimming was
not used in witchcraft cases in sixteenth century England but reappeared in the
seventeenth with the first reported incidence at Northampton in 1612.
Those accused of capital witchcraft were usually tried
at the Assizes. Once the Assizes opened, a Grand Jury was called comprising
persons of higher social standing and education than those who sat as petty
jurors in the trial itself. The Grand Jury received the bills of indictment and
examined prosecution witnesses for each case to determine whether there were
sufficient grounds to put the accused on trial. If the majority considered the evidence
sufficient, the case went to trial.
The accused was brought into court manacled. Despite
having, under pressure, confessed her guilt to the JP, most accused witches
pleaded not guilty at trial. The examinations taken by the JP were read out in
court and evidence heard from the victim, if living, or a member of the victim’s
family. Others, including the JP and the women involved in the search for the
witch’s teat, provided supporting evidence. The accused rarely called her own
witnesses, and was usually unrepresented. The progress of the case involved
disputation between the accused and the accuser and witnesses. Hearsay was
permitted and judges were interventionist, asking questions and involving
themselves to a degree that would be considered improper today.
Records no longer exist for all counties but in the
period 1570-1609 at the Assizes of the Home Circuit 24% of witchcraft
accusations resulted in execution, a similar rate to other capital crimes. Only
44% of those accused of witchcraft are recorded as having suffered punishment
of any sort. The conviction rate for witchcraft offences actually declined
under the 1604 Act, possibly due to the higher level of proof required. The
glaring exception was the activities of Matthew Hopkins, the self-styled
Witchfinder General, and John Stearne freelancing in East Anglia during the
upheaval of the Civil War.
Those found guilty of causing death by witchcraft were
hanged, the same penalty as for murder by any other means, unless that murder
was high or petty treason where the penalty was burning. The body of the
executed ‘witch’ was then buried in unconsecrated ground. A fortunate few were
granted a special royal pardon. During her reign Elizabeth I granted thirty-six
pardons to people convicted of witchcraft.
In 1736 the 1604 witchcraft Act was repealed but,
though the more educated sections of society no longer believed in witches and
their ability to do harm, witchcraft beliefs lingered with attempts at swimming
occurring as late as the second half of the nineteenth century. Today, even in
my sunny corner of the world, some still believe that harm can be done by
supernatural means. Notices are regularly placed in local newspapers by those
‘skilled’ at removing the evil eye and curses. Fortunately, the law no longer
concerns itself with such matters.
______________________________________________
Images:
Court of Wards by an unidentified painter. Public
domain via Wikimedia Commons
Title page of Witches Apprehended,
Examined, and Executed... (1613) showing a witch being swum. Wellcome
Collection Attribution
4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
The Bridled Tongue
By Catherine Meyrick
England 1586
Death and life are in the power of the tongue.
Alyce Bradley has few choices when her father decides it is time she marry as many refuse to see her as other than the girl she once was—unruly, outspoken and close to her grandmother, a woman suspected of witchcraft.
Thomas Granville, an ambitious privateer, inspires fierce loyalty in those close to him and hatred in those he has crossed. Beyond a large dowry, he is seeking a virtuous and dutiful wife. Neither he nor Alyce expect more from marriage than mutual courtesy and respect.
As the King of Spain launches his great armada and England braces for invasion, Alyce must confront closer dangers from both her own and Thomas’s past, threats that could not only destroy her hopes of love and happiness but her life. And Thomas is powerless to help.
Alyce Bradley has few choices when her father decides it is time she marry as many refuse to see her as other than the girl she once was—unruly, outspoken and close to her grandmother, a woman suspected of witchcraft.
Thomas Granville, an ambitious privateer, inspires fierce loyalty in those close to him and hatred in those he has crossed. Beyond a large dowry, he is seeking a virtuous and dutiful wife. Neither he nor Alyce expect more from marriage than mutual courtesy and respect.
As the King of Spain launches his great armada and England braces for invasion, Alyce must confront closer dangers from both her own and Thomas’s past, threats that could not only destroy her hopes of love and happiness but her life. And Thomas is powerless to help.
Pick up your copy of
The Bridled Tongue
Catherine Meyrick
Catherine Meyrick is a writer of
historical fiction with a particular love of Elizabethan England. Her stories
weave fictional characters into the gaps within the historical record—tales of
ordinary people who are very much men and women of their time, yet in so many
ways like us today.
Although she grew up in regional
Victoria, Australia, Catherine has lived all her adult life in Melbourne where
she works as a librarian. She has a Master of Arts in history and is also a
family history obsessive.
Catherine’s first novel, Forsaking All Other, was the 2018 Gold
Medal winner of The Coffee Pot
Book Club Historical Romance Book of the Year. She has recently released a
second novel, also set in the 16th century England. The Bridled Tongue, this time set
against the threat of immanent invasion by the Spanish in 1588. It touches on
issues such as arranged marriages, sibling rivalry and jealousy, the dangers of
gossip, and the ways the past can reach out and affect the present. The Bridled
Tongue is a Coffee Pot Book Club recommended read.
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See you on your next coffee break!
Take Care,
Mary Anne xxx