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| The Pendle Witches: A true story of murder, witchcraft
and revenge.
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| The Pendle Witches or Lancashire Witches were the most
famous witches in English legal history |
| The Lancahire Witch Trial |
In the year 1612, at Lancaster gaol, in the English county
of Lancashire, ten men and women were hanged for the crime of witchcraft.
The Pendle Witches, as they became known, were believed to have been responsible
for the murder by witchcraft of seventeen people in and around the Forest
of Pendle. |
| Thirteen Witches in Pendle |
There were in total thirteen Pendle Witches: Alizon Device,
Elizabeth Device, James Device, Anne Whittle, alias Chattox, Anne Redferne,
Alice Nutter, Katherine Hewitt, John Bulcock, Jane Bulcock & Isobel Robey
were the ten hanged at Lancaster gaol.
Elizabeth Southerns, alias Demdike, died in Lancaster Gaol awaiting trial,
but was nevertheless considered to be a witch on the basis of evidence already
given. Jennet Preston, who lived just over the Lancashire border, was tried
in Yorkshire and hanged at York in 1612. Finally, Magaret Pearson was found
guilty of witchcraft at Lancaster, but not murder, and received a sentance
of one years imprisonment. |
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| Murder by Witchcraft |
The Pendle Witches were accused of selling their souls
to familiar spirits or devils who appeared to them in human and animal form.
In return for their souls, it was believed that the witches received the
power to kill or lame who they pleased.
The usual method of murder, descirbed in Demdike's confession, was to make
an ethigy of the intented victim, known as a 'picture of clay'. The image
was then crumbled or burned over a period of time, causing the victim to
fall ill and die. |
| The Witches of Malkin Tower |
The family at the centre of the witchcraft allegations:
Alizon Device, James Device, Elizabeth Device and Demdike lived at a place
called Malkin Tower. Demdike, who was in here eighties, was the head of
the family and was rumored locally to be a very powerful witch.
An important meeting took place at Malkin Tower on Good Friday in 1612.
The meeting, believed to have been a witches sabbat, was described to the
authorities by James Device. Many of those who attended where later hanged. |
| A Witches Feud |
Demdike had once been a close friend of another reputed
witch Chattox, but they fell out and then feuded bitterly. The dispute between
Demdike and Chattox was probably a reason why they and their respective
families were willing to make incriminating statements against one another.
When Demdike died in gaol, Chattox changed here story, claiming Demdike
was responsible for inticing here into witchcraft. |
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| The Wonderful Discoverie... |
So much is known about the Pendle Witches because the proceedings
of the Lancashire trial where recorded by the clerk of the court Thomas
Potts and published in the book: The Wonderful Discoverie of Witches in
the Countie of Lancaster.
The majority of the evidence came from the confessions of just four of the
accused: Alizon Device, her brother James Device, their grandmother Demdike,
and their enemy Chattox. |
| Witchcraft: fact or fiction? |
Nobody knows what possesed Alizon and James Device, Demdike
and Chattox to make the extrodinary statements that they did. Torture was
not used in England to extract confessions from witches as it was on mainland
Europe. Towards the end of the trial the prisoners would have confessed
in the hope of receiving mercy, but the most important confessions were
given pre-trial and seemingly under very little duress.
The Pendle Witches incriminated each other, perhaps in the hope of saving
themselves, but also gave remarkable accounts of their own activities. Had
they remained silent there would very probably have been no trial and no
executions.
Alizon Device gave here first damning account of witchcraft quite voluntarily,
and seems to have genuinely believed in her own guilt and that of her family's.
Some suspected witches did protest their innocence to the end and others
where aquited when evidence against them was found to have been fabricated.
The trials however dubious by today's standards were not a forgone colusion.
NB: Modern witches or 'Wiccans' do not worship the devil, who they do not believe exists, and their code of conduct forbids them from working harmful magic. |
| Read the authentic confessions of Englands' most notorious
witches |
| The confessions, often fantastic , sometimes contradictary,
always compelling are best read in the following order: Alizon Device, Demdike,
Chattox, James Device. |
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