The belief in witchcraft and the occult
dates back to time immemorial.
A witch or warlock was a person who practised sorcery, having supernatural powers
to work with evil spirits or the
devil. The term was applied to anyone
who had remarkable or inexplicable means of accomplishment. It is said that between 1484 and 1782, at
least 300,000 witches were put to death in Europe
alone. The laws of James 1 against
witchcraft in the early 17th century were particularly severe and
people were accused of witchcraft on the flimsiest ‘evidence’.
It was firmly
believed that witches and warlocks could be deprived of their powers by
drawing blood and that their bodies had an area that was sensitive to pain but
would not bleed. Indeed, a whole
profession of ‘witch pickers’ grew up, touring the country to identify witches
and sometimes they themselves were convicted of the very crime they were
supposed to expose. A popular method
employed was ‘the swimming of a witch’, which entailed the suspect being
lowered three times into the water with the right thumb tied to the left big
toe. If the suspect floated, he or she
was guilty of witchcraft. In England the
penal laws against witchcraft were repealed in 1736, although supposed witches
were still hounded. One might think
that most of this was superstitious nonsense but people firmly believed
it. There are still many curiosities and
tales to remind us of this strange period, mostly from the 17th and
18th centuries
We have covered a variety of witch stories under Churches and here are some more :
We have covered a variety of witch stories under Churches and here are some more :
The Pendle
witches
Don’t be surprised if you see the figures of
three witches huddled outside a shop at Newchurch-in-Pendle in Lancashire , for this is Pendle witch country of the 17th
century. The models are there to draw
attention to souvenirs on sale in the shop.
In 1612, ten alleged witches from
the area were sent to the scaffold under James 1’s new laws against
witchcraft. These women and their
alleged victims resided in the villages and farms surrounding Pendle Hill,
which at 1832ft is a distinctive landmark in this picturesque area, although
few traces of their existence remain today.
In the churchyard at Newchurch
there is an old gravestone referred to locally as the witches grave,
because of the name ‘Nutter’ and a skull and crossbones
thereon. A smaller stone close up to
the wall of the church is more likely to be the grave of one of the convicted
women, Alice Nutter. Old Demdyke and
Chattox, another two of the alleged witches were said to have robbed the
graveyard at Newchurch, because bones and clay effigies were found in their
homes. Apparently all the women freely
confessed to being witches.
The church at Newchurch has an
unusual ‘eye of God’ built into
the fabric of the tower, which is said to have provided additional protection
from the evil that once seems to have afflicted these parts.
Of witches and
devils
A 17th century notice, preserved in the Drunken
Duck Inn at Barngates near Ambleside in Cumbria reminds us how seriously
witchcraft was taken at that time :
To the People of this hamlet
Cast out
all
WITCHES
And
DEVILS
That have lately
annoy’d these parts
with several
Grievous Molestations
and Curiosities
Some councils
directing a due improvement of
The TERRIBLE
THINGS lately occurring
IN THIS
NEIGHBOURHOOD
By the Unusual and
Amazing range of
EVIL SPIRITS
Prevent the Wrongs
which those Evil Angels may
intend against all
sorts of People among us
especially in
accusations of the Innocent.
1693
Witch posts
Belief in witches was also very
real in the North York Moors and most villages had a known witch, often
rejoicing in such names as Old Nan or old Peg – usually well known for their
medical powers! But really quite harmless old women who lived alone. Most of the cottages had a witch
post , usually an oak post
forming part of the fireplace and often quite elaborately carved and all bore a
cross. The use of this ancient symbol implied
belief that its magic powers would avert evil and give protection against
witchcraft. A good example can be seen
in a private cottage at Newton-Upon-Rawcliffe .
. In later years a cross was actually
cast on the oven door of the kitchen range for the same reason. Many examples can be seen at Ryedale Folk Museum
in the delightful village
of Hutton-le-Hole .
Witches
memorial
Many Scottish
witches were taken to Edinburgh
where they were burned at the stake close to Edinburgh Castle .
A small memorial fountain can be seen at the top of Castle Hill and a plaque
tells us:
‘This fountain designed by John Duncan RSA,
is near the site on which many
witches were burned at the stake. The wicked
head and serene head
signify that some used their exceptional
knowledge for evil purposes
while others were misunderstood and wished
their kind nothing but good.
The serpent has the dual significance of
evil and of wisdom.
The foxglove spray further emphasises the
dual purpose of many common objects..
The witches fountain
The burning of witches
Littletown is a tiny hamlet now
absorbed by the ancient Burgh of Dornoch in the north of Scotland . In a small garden there, a simple stone
bearing the date 1722, marks the spot where the last witch was burnt in Scotland . Janet Horn had been accused of ‘turning her daughter into a pony and
having her shod by the devil!’
Witches were usually burnt in
public and the last ‘legal’ witch burning in England took place at Pocklington
in East Yorkshire . The parish register for 1631 records
that ‘old wife Green was burnt in the
Market Place for acts of witchcraft.’
Pocklington Market Place
Photograph © Copyright Ian Lavender and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
I am grateful to Ian Lavender for the use of his Geograph photograph
The murder of
a witch
The Half Moon pub at Wilstone in
Hertfordshire was the scene of an unusual Coroner’s Inquest back in 1751, it
was held to inquire into the death of an alleged witch. Ruth Osborn had been accused of witchcraft
following an incident whilst she was begging for food at Gubblecote, her
subsequent mutterings being interpreted as a curse. Notices were posted that she and her husband
would be publicly ducked at Wilstone on 21st April 1751 . Despite resistance, they were dragged from
their place of refuge in the church vestry by a mob said to number some 4,000
people. They were repeatedly ducked in
the pond at Wilstone, which resulted in the death of Ruth Osborn who had been
physically held under the water by the village chimney sweep, Luke Colley. Colley was subsequently convicted of murder
and was hanged at Hertford Gaol on 24th August 1751 and his body was hung in
chains at Gubblecote.
Granny Kempock’s stone
On the cliff top overlooking the Clyde
at Kempock Point in Scotland is a curious standing stone, six feet high and shaped somewhat like
an old woman. Known as Granny Kempock’s
stone, it is thought that this local witch,
much feared by seafarers,
believed she had the power to control the winds in those parts. It is said that sailors and fishermen would
walk seven times round the stone to ensure favourable weather. Wedded couples would also receive a blessing if they walked around the stone.
I am grateful to Thomas Nugent for the use of his Geograph photographs.
Old Mother
Shipton
The
legendary sorceress and soothsayer, Old
Mother Shipton, is said to have been born in the cave at Knaresborough in North Yorkshire in 1488. She died
in 1561 at the age of 73 years.
Born Ursula
Southill, she married York builder Tobias Shipton when she was 24 years old.
Every woman is entitled to be ugly but it seems that Ursula abused the
privilege. ‘She was very morose, big
boned, her head was long with great
goggling sharp and fiery eyes; her nose of an incredible and un- proportionate length,
having in it many crooks and turnings and adorned with many strange purples and
diverse colours, which like vapours of brimstone gas, gave such a lustre in the
dead of night.’ So said a contemporary
writer who went on to say, ‘ She had in
addition a chin of the nutcracker order, yellow skin shrivelled and wrinkled
with one solitary big tooth standing out of her mouth like a tusk. Her neck was
so distorted that her right shoulder supported her head, her legs crooked, with
feet and toes turned towards her left side so that when she walked to the right
it seemed as if she were travelling to the left.’ That may be so but apparently her
understanding was extraordinary and her strange powers of prophesy became known
throughout the land. Over one hundred years after her death, Samuel Pepys had
recorded in his diary that Mother Shipton had foretold the great fire of
London. Her predictions were widespread, she is said to have foretold of the
Dissolution of the Monasteries, the defeat of the Armada, the Civil Warf, the
Great Plague and so on. ‘Carriages
without horses shall go and accidents fill the world with woe. Around the world
thoughts shall fly in the twinkling of and eye. Iron in the water shall float
as easy as a wooden boat. Gold shall be found in a foreign land that’s not now
known.’ Is how some of her predictions have been quoted. In his Collection
of Prophesies of 1645, Astrologer W. Lilley quoted that 16 of her predictions
had been fulfilled.
Many people thought that she was a witch, especially
Cardinal Wolsey whom Mother Shipton predicted would never be Archbishop of
York. Apparently he sent her a message that when he did enter York he would
have her burned as a witch. Fortunately for her she was right. Equally
fortunate, one of her predictions did not come true, the end of the world in
1881!
The Old Dun
Cow
An old cottage in Halfpenny Lane ,
just outside Longridge in Lancashire , bears
the date 1616 above the door, together with the rib bone of a cow The story goes that during a severe drought
in the 17th century, the
old dun cow provided enough milk for
all, long after the wells had run
dry. Legend has it that a local witch
was caught milking the cow into a sieve and the cow died.
The Old Dun Cow
A queen’s pardon
Jane Wenham of Walkern in Hertfordshire was probably the
last witch to be condemned to death in England . In 1712 she was convicted of ‘bewitching sheep and farm workers,’ but she was granted the Queen’s pardon.
It is said that
St Mary's Church, Walkern
Photograph © Copyright John Salmon and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
I am grateful to John Salmon for the use of his Geograph photograph
Turning the devil’s stone
A huge boulder outside the east gateway to the church at
Shebbear near Holsworthy in Devon is said to belong
to the devil. This lump of quartz
conglomerate, 6ft long and 4ft wide, and weighing more than 1 ton, is the
subject of an annual ritual when the stone is turned over. On the 5th November each year,
local men with ropes and crowbars and accompanied by the jangling of the church
bell to frighten the devil off, turn the stone over to defy the devil’s power.
Gransden Mill
An eerie post mill, fully restored, stands in the
attractive village
of Great Gransden near St
Neots in Cambridgeshire. In the 1860’s,
the mill was owned by one William Webb, who found a book called 'The Infidel’s Bible' amongst the belongings of his deceased
brother – all about black magic! Webb
hid the book away in the mill which promptly stopped working, and it stayed
that way for three years until the book was removed and burnt. Apparently, at that time the sails started
to turn again.
Gransden Mill
Dracula
Vampirism, the superstition that a ghost or evil spirit
leaves the grave at night to suck the blood of a sleeping person is vividly
portrayed by Bram Stoker in his novel Dracula.
Stoker was in fact visiting the port of Whitby
in North Yorkshire when he wrote the novel and
part of the story entails a shipwreck off the coast at Whitby , when Count Dracula, in the shape of a
huge dog, swims ashore, runs up the 199 steps to the churchyard and takes
refuge in the grave of a suicide. There
is a grave, which would be pointed out by officials at the church, bearing a
skull and crossbones and said to be the very grave! The stark remains of Whitby Abbey are a
fitting background.
Whitby churchyard
The Dent
Vampire
George Hodgson of Dent in the Yorkshire Dales, is said to
have been a vampire! He died in
1715 at the ripe old age of 94 years and it is said that his previous good
health and longevity was due to his dealings with the devil and, it is pointed
out, he had canine teeth, a sure
sign was he was a vampire! Apparently
he was first buried in a far corner of the churchyard, but after he was seen walking
in the moonlight and after some
mysterious deaths in the area, his body was exhumed. When the coffin was opened it was said that
his flesh was glowing pink and his hair had grown long. The body was re-buried near to the
church porch with a stake through the heart!
There is a hole through the gravestone – maybe to make a quick
replacement of the stake?
No comments:
Post a Comment