In Newcastle upon Tyne, witch trials were conducted in the 17th century, during an era of social and religious turmoil. Many people were accused of being witches, tried and executed.
The history of the Newcastle witch trials starts in Scotland. The extension of the Witchcraft Act in 1649 sparked a intense witch hunting period. [1] This spilled into the north of England and in Newcastle. [1] 1649 saw Puritan Magistrates at Newcastle send two sergeants, Thomas Shevel and Cuthbert Nicholson, to Scotland to bring an un-named Scottish witch-finder to try witches in Newcastle. [1] [2] [3]
A town crier sent through the town would cry "All people that would bring in any complaint against any woman for a witch." [2] [3] This led to 30 women being brought into the town hall. The 30 suspected witches were held in New Gate Gaol in the lead up to their trials. [3] One witch, Jane Martin, was held in the dungeon at Newcastle Castle, as this was her native county prison in Northumberland. [3]
A year later, in the guildhall at Newcastle's Quayside, the 31 trials of the accused took place. [3] Following these trials, 16 were found guilty and hanged on 21 August 1650 alongside criminals convicted of other crimes. [2] [3] These hangings drew a large audience, as the events were treated as entertainment. [3]
One of the convicted, Margaret Brown, asked that God give a remarkable sign that could prove her innocence. [2] [3] As soon as she was taken from the ladder, blood gushed from her neck onto the onlookers. [2]
A list of names of those executed for witchcraft on Newcastle's Town Moor on 21 August 1650 was recorded in the Parish register for Newcastle St. Andrews Church. [4]
Name [2] | Execution | Date |
---|---|---|
Matthew Bulmer | Executed | 21 August 1650 |
Elizabeth Anderson | Executed by hanging | |
Jane Hunter | Executed by hanging | |
Mary Potts | Executed by hanging | |
Alice Hume | Executed by hanging | |
Margaret Muffit | Executed by hanging | |
Margaret Maddison | Executed by hanging | |
Elizabeth Brown | Executed by hanging | |
Margaret Brown | Executed by hanging | |
Jane Copeland | Executed by hanging | |
Ann Watson | Executed by hanging | |
Elianor Henderson | Executed by hanging | |
Elizabeth Dobson | Executed by hanging | |
Katherine Coultor | Executed by hanging | |
Elianor Rogerson | Executed by hanging | |
Jane Martin [5] | Executed by hanging | |
Margaret White (sister of Jane Martin) [5] | Confessed on behalf of her sister, thus was also hung | |
Dorothy Swinhoe [5] | Unknown whether executed | |
Ann Menin [5] | Unknown whether executed |
Witchfinders were people who were paid to test whether someone was a witch.
The witchfinder in Newcastle witch trials came from Scotland. [5] He was paid 20 shillings [2] per "witch" he found.
In the end, the witchfinder in Newcastle trials was cast into prison. [1]
The witchfinder used a pin to prick the accused on their thigh. If no blood came out, the accused was determined to be a witch.
In July 1649, the Puritan Magistrates at Newcastle commissioned a witchfinder to find witches. [5] Thirty women were accused as witches. As a result, all were arrested and jailed awaiting trial.
The Newcastle witch trials emerged as a result of political unrest, religious reform and personal disputes, [1] and these became motivations for hunting and persecuting those believed to be witches.
Because of witches' supposed association with the devil, religion was influential in the city's decision to hold witch trials. [1] This belief was built on during the trials.
The English Civil War (1642–1651) created a political unrest in the UK between Parliamentarians and Catholics. Charles struggled before parliament before starting a "tyrannical" eleven years of rule in which parliament was not assembled. [6] King Charles I was imprisoned in Newcastle upon Tyne from 1646 to 1647, at the time of Jane Martin's accusations. [7]
Jane Martin and her sister Margaret White were among the accused women. Jane Martin was accused of witchcraft for being servant to the devil for five years. It was claimed the devil and her would eat together. Jane Martin was accused of being responsible for the death of a man (Thomas Young) by manipulating a kiln of oats to explode using the will of her mind. Margaret confessed on behalf of the sisters and both Margaret White and Jane Martin were hanged in 1650 with other accused witches on Town Moor. [5] [7]
The Salem witch trials were a series of hearings and prosecutions of people accused of witchcraft in colonial Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693. More than 200 people were accused. Thirty people were found guilty, nineteen of whom were executed by hanging. One other man, Giles Corey, died under torture after refusing to enter a plea, and at least five people died in the disease-ridden jails.
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Susannah Martin was one of fourteen women executed for the suspicion of practicing witchcraft during the Salem witch trials of colonial Massachusetts.
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Matthew Hopkins was an English witchhunter whose career flourished during the time of the English Civil War. Between 1644 and 1645, Hopkins and his associates were responsible for the deaths of more accused witches than had been executed in the previous 100 years.
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