In Würzburg, a small town in southern Germany, in 1628, a ten-year-old boy called Hoel was forced to sit on a horse outside the church and watch while his mother’s breasts were cut off and pushed in the faces of his elder brothers as they had their skin torn off with red-hot pincers. A man of religion had to watch the youngster’s reaction as his father had a metal spike pushed through his body from his rectum and, finally, while his whole family was burnt alive. Hoel evidently failed the test because, less than a month later, he too suffered the same fate. The crime that he and his family had been accused of was witchcraft.
Witchcraft: Superstition & Mass Hysteria in Europe and America
In Würzburg, a
small town in southern Germany, in 1628, a ten-year-old boy called Hoel was
forced to sit on a horse outside the church and watch while his mother’s
breasts were cut off and pushed in the faces of his elder brothers as they had
their skin torn off with red-hot pincers. A man of religion had to watch the youngster’s reaction
as his father had a metal spike pushed through his body from his rectum
and, finally, while his whole family was burnt alive. Hoel evidently failed
the test because, less than a month later, he too suffered the same fate.
The crime that he and his family had been accused
of was witchcraft.
All across
southern Germany in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, similar
stories can be told usually of women (but also of men and children) who were
murdered for no good reason. Katherine Kepler, mother of the
famous astronomer and scientist, only escaped death because of her
son’s reputation.
A century later, just across the border in Salzburg, Austria, 139 people died,
of whom 91 were boys aged between ten and twenty-one. They were all
homeless beggars who were supposed to be followers of Magic Jackl,
the twenty-two year old son of a witch, who confessed that her son could make
himself invisible
and was responsible for the bad weather in the city.
Jackl was clever
enough to see what was coming and to escape the city before he could be caught.
Sadly, an old lady in Stockholm around the same time (1676), whose name was
Malin Matsdotter, was not so fortunate. She denied she was a witch when her
daughters – who, by the way, volunteered the information about their own
mother – accused her of abducting their children. Because she
would not confess
even under torture, she was burnt alive (rather than beheaded.)
Across the
English Channel from mainland Europe, King James I published a book on the
‘science’ of demonology (or devils). He became convinced that witches were
trying to kill him when his ship was caught in a storm on the way from Denmark
to England. Among the methods for interrogating witches that he
recommended was making women sit on red-hot stools so that they could
no longer have
sexual intercourse with Satan. Thousands of deaths in Scotland
and England followed.
All in all,
although no exact figures are available, roughly fifty thousand people were executed from
the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries for witchcraft – about three
quarters of them women. The last such case was in Britain in 1863 when a
deaf mute had
to undergo ‘trial by water’. This meant she was held under water for
a long period. If she then sank (meaning that she drowned), she was innocent.
If she rose to the surface, she was guilty – a situation that it would seem
difficult for her to win.
Witchcraft is
usually seen as an example of the irrationality and cruelty of the Christian
Church. It might, therefore, come as a surprise to learn that until the year
1000, witchcraft was considered a superstition by that same
Church. The belief, however, continued among uneducated people who relied
on charms to
protect them from evil, fortune tellers and astrology – all
of which were condemned by the Church, although not very
strongly.
After the year
1000, though, demons were said to wander the earth tricking human
beings into having sex with them. By the fourteenth century, ideas had changed.
Rather than being innocent victims of the Devil, witches were seen as his willing followers.
For instance, in 1324, a rich widow and money-lender called Alice Kyteler from
Kilkenny in Ireland, who’d had four husbands and survived them all (becoming
very wealthy in
the process), was accused of poisoning them and sacrificing animals
in Devil worship to
make sure that they died. Alice was no fool and fled to England
before she could be arrested, but her servant – who confessed under torture to
helping Alice – was burnt alive.
By 1500, demons were
so common in Christian mythology that their faces and figures can still be seen
cut into the stone of church walls from that period. Pope John XXII
added witchcraft to the list of crimes against the Church and Pope
Innocent VIII named witchcraft as the main reason why some women
could not become pregnant.
How did these
strange beliefs take so many lives? Why were witches accused and burnt in some
cities while, in others, no serious attention was paid to the idea that they
were walking the streets causing mischief? Let’s turn now to the most famous
witch trial in history that took place in 1692 and ‘93 in Salem, Massachusetts,
U.S.A., and see how it began and why it resulted in twenty-five deaths in a
community of only a couple of hundred.
The first thing
to say was that the world was a very different place in the late seventeenth
century in Massachusetts than it is today. To the inhabitants of
Salem, Satan was walking the earth looking for followers every single
day. Put
another way, the supernatural was a very real fear for these
people, most of whom had had no other education than in reading, writing,
counting and the Bible. Their religion was a very strict one: dancing, music,
singing, toys and dolls were all forbidden even for the very young. There were
no parties for birthdays, and Christmas, the major festival in the Christian
calendar, was spent exactly the same as any other day, with no special food
and, very definitely, no presents.
The minister of
the local church was an unusually severe man even for this rather colourless
environment. Mr. Samuel Parris insisted on public penance for very minor
examples of rule breaking, no matter how respectable the member of the
community, so that everyone knew everybody else’s business. Needless to say,
all this added to social pressure and increased tension between
neighbours. To
make matters worse, the minister of the neighbouring town, Mr.
Cotton Mather, was a local expert on witchcraft and had written
several religious pamphlets on the subject.
Although the
population had known each other all their lives, this did not, of course, mean
that there was perfect harmony between them. In Salem, like
anywhere else, there were disputes over ownership of land, for example.
Another longstanding issue
was that the community had shown reluctance to pay the present minister
his agreed salary and there was some bad feeling between him and certain
families who spoke out against these payments.
But if the
history of bad relations among various members of the community and their
dislike of some of their neighbours suggest that the trials to come were
not altogether motivated by religious feelings, this did not
seem to affect
the villagers or the judges. The first suspicion of witchcraft was
when Ann Putnam, twelve, Betty Parris, the daughter of the minister and aged
only nine, and her cousin, Abigail Williams, who was a couple of years older,
started having fits, screaming and throwing things about their
home. They complained that the Devil was making them uncomfortable. Of course,
in those days, the minister from the neighbouring village – not a doctor – was
called in to manage the matter.
In the end, the
girls said that they were being visited by several of the women in the
neighbourhood in their dreams and named names. Sarah Osborne, an old lady
who did not attend church regularly in this very religious community and who
was not on friendly terms with the minister; and Sarah Good, who was a homeless
beggar, were accused. As the story went round the community, more young girls
began experiencing the upsetting symptoms and strengthened the accusations. A
girl as young as four gave testimony against Sarah Good, for instance.
What’s more, as
other girls became involved in making accusations, so more members of the
community were named: Martha and Giles Corey, an elderly couple, for example.
Martha had set
no store by the girls’ accusations against her neighbours and
had made her opinion known, but now found herself implicated. Giles, her husband, was
so disgusted by the trials that he felt it beneath him to plead. In a bid to make
him say whether he was guilty or not, he was pressed to death by having heavy
rocks put on his body. He had been a good neighbour to his accusers and their
families all his life, but that did not save him. Neither did the well-known enmity between
the Putnam and the Proctor families cause the community to reflect that the symptoms
shown by the girls might be because of something as mundane as settling scores,
rather than, say, the more exotic charge of witchcraft against
John Proctor and his pregnant wife.
Not everyone was
so unfortunate as the Proctor family though. The little girls were asked to
stand outside the church doors and to point to members of the community who had
the mark of the Devil on them. When one girl indicated the minister, Samuel
Parris’, wife, she got a slap round the face and apologised. The sun, she said,
had been shining in her eyes and she had not recognised the lady.
As well as
the evidence given by the girls, the court conducted touch tests. This meant
that when the witch responsible for a girl having fits touched her, the fits would
stop. Clearly, if a girl was only pretending to have a fit in order to show that the woman
was guilty, this was not likely to help the accused. People suspected of
being witches often also confessed under torture.
All in all, twenty-five members of the community were hanged before the Governor stepped in and demanded that others awaiting trial should be found not guilty. Some years later, the Governor announced that some of the women who were hanged were innocent and paid small sums of money to their families. However, it was not until 2001, more than three hundred years after the executions took place that the Governor of Massachusetts apologised for the verdicts and declared all the hanged women and men guiltless. That was a long time to wait since Ann Putnam, when trying to join a different church in 1706, thirteen years after the executions ended, asked forgiveness for her evidence, which she said was untrue and the Devil’s work. She was allowed to join.
If you want to watch some videos on this topic, you can click on the links to YouTube videos below.
If you want to answer questions on this article to test how much you understand, you can click on the green box: Finished Reading?
Videos :
1. Witchcraft: Crash Course European History (15:32)
2. The Real Cause of the Salem Witch Trials (6:35)
3. Ugly History: Witch Hunts (5:25)
4. The Salem Witch Trials (1692) (2:10)