PRIZE ESSAYS OF THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION
1909
To this Essay was awarded the Herbert Baxter Adams Prize in European History for 1909
A HISTORY OF WITCHCRAFT IN ENGLAND FROM 1558 TO 1718
BY WALLACE NOTESTEIN ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF HISTORY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA
PUBLISHED BY THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION WASHINGTON, 1911
COPYRIGHT, 1911 BY THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION WASHINGTON, D.C.
THE LORD BALTIMORE PRESS BALTIMORE, M.D., U.S.A.
PREFACE.
In its original form this essay was the dissertation submitted for a doctorate in philosophy conferred by Yale University in 1908. When first projected it was the writer's purpose to take up the subject of English witchcraft under certain general political and social aspects. It was not long, however, before he began to feel that preliminary to such a treatment there was necessary a chronological survey of the witch trials. Those strange and tragic affairs were so closely involved with the politics, literature, and life of the seventeenth century that one is surprised to find how few of them have received accurate or complete record in history. It may be said, in fact, that few subjects have gathered about themselves so large concretions of misinformation as English witchcraft. This is largely, of course, because so little attention has been given to it by serious students of history. The mistakes and misunderstandings of contemporary writers and of the local historians have been handed down from county history to county history until many of them have crept into general works. For this reason it was determined to attempt a chronological treatment which would give a narrative history of the more significant trials along with some account of the progress of opinion. This plan has been adhered to somewhat strictly, sometimes not without regret upon the part of the writer. It is his hope later in a series of articles to deal with some of the more general phases of the subject, with such topics as the use of torture, the part of the physicians, the contagious nature of the witch alarms, the relation of Puritanism to persecution, the supposed influence of the Royal Society, the general causes for the gradual decline of the belief, and other like questions. It will be seen in the course of the narrative that some of these matters have been touched upon.
This study of witchcraft has been limited to a period of about one hundred and sixty years in English history. The year 1558 has been chosen as the starting point because almost immediately after the accession of Elizabeth there began the movement for a new law, a movement which resulted in the statute of 1563. With that statute the history of the persecution of witches gathers importance. The year 1718 has been selected as a concluding date because that year was marked by the publication of Francis Hutchinson's notable attack upon the belief. Hutchinson levelled a final and deadly blow at the dying superstition. Few men of intelligence dared after that avow any belief in the reality of witchcraft; it is probable that very few even secretly cherished such a belief. A complete history would of course include a full account both of the witch trials from Anglo-Saxon times to Elizabeth's accession and of the various witch-swimming incidents of the eighteenth century. The latter it has not seemed worth while here to consider. The former would involve an examination of all English sources from the earliest times and would mean a study of isolated and unrelated trials occurring at long intervals (at least, we have record only of such) and chiefly in church courts. The writer has not undertaken to treat this earlier period; he must confess to but small knowledge of it. In the few pages which he has given to it he has attempted nothing more than to sketch from the most obvious sources an outline of what is currently known as to English witches and witchcraft prior to the days of Elizabeth. It is to be hoped that some student of medieval society will at some time make a thorough investigation of the history of witchcraft in England to the accession of the great Queen.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A History of Witchcraft in England from 1558 to 17
- 2: And Shadwell must be used by the student
- 3: A work at once entertaining and learned
- 4: Since the award to it of the Adams Prize
- 5: The beginnings of english witchcraft
- 6: But to the average mind sorcery
- 7: It limits itself to a narrative of the witch trials
- 8: Concerne harmfulli the kyngis persone
- 9: Or sorceries should be considered felony
- 10: I wylle geve the alle thatt I have'
- 11: By which witchcraft was again made a felony
- 12: The position seekers and the treasure seekers
- 13: And if possible to detect the witch
- 14: In November of 1558 Sir Anthony Fortescue
- 15: Kept in his employ special detectors of conjuring
- 16: The church was permitted to retain its jurisdiction
- 17: Proceedings against Dame Alice Kyteler
- 18: Of Zweibruecken printed as No
- 19: For the correspondence with Cole see I
- 20: Bishop of Durham Surtees Soc
- 21: And concluded several hainous and vilanous practices
- 22: Commissary to the Reverend father in God
- 23: Master Foscue was unquestionably Sir John Fortescue
- 24: Mother Waterhouse was her own worst enemy
- 25: The mother suspected Ursley of witchcraft
- 26: Ursley promised to unwitch her and seemingly kept her word
- 27: Who denied the accusations against her
- 28: That at Warboys in Huntingdonshire
- 29: Justice Fenner of the king's court
- 30: Throughout her life the queen continued to stand by Dee
- 31: And all the jurie touching hir innocencie
- 32: Shee founde no bodie but herselfe alone
- 33: Reprinted 1586 1587 and 1807 1808
- 34: Not until a decade after his Hoppe Garden
- 35: Familiarized with accounts of imposture
- 36: Scot found no philosophy of the subject
- 37: Witchcraft is in truth a cousening art
- 38: What did he really believe about witchcraft
- 39: 12 For another see Discoverie of Witchcraft
- 40: Prefatory letter and L M 2 verso
- 41: Every body sayth now that mother W
- 42: Almost by accident hit upon the use of exorcism
- 43: Or her daughter Alse Gooderidge
- 44: But the exorcists were not by any means disheartened
- 45: The exorcist had outdone himself
- 46: Certainly it was accepted by Harsnett
- 47: Harsnett was supported by the powers in church and state
- 48: While directed primarily against exorcism
- 49: Harsnett takes it up in his Discovery
- 50: Harsnett quotes Darrel for this statement
- 51: Declaration of Egregious Popish Impostures
- 52: Fian admitted in his confession
- 53: Were not the power of the Devil bridled by God
- 54: All witches except children should be sentenced to death
- 55: Imposed the death penalty for killing by witchcraft
- 56: By a year's imprisonment and the pillory
- 57: The first record of its use was in 1612
- 58: 27 Master Avery saw other spectres
- 59: Who had been piling up charges against Alice Nutter
- 60: Alice Nutter was a member of a well known county family
- 61: But Master Enger was responsible
- 62: Narratives of Sorcery and Magic
- 63: Account of the Northampton witches
- 64: Account of the Northampton witches
- 65: Who wished to be rid of Nutter
- 66: Suddenly swooped down upon the Pendle families
- 67: Only the Malking Tower incident was new
- 68: Exclusive of those at Salmesbury
- 69: Of which the Earl of Rutland was head
- 70: Master Enger made light of the story when it was told to him
- 71: A girl alleged to have been bewitched by a Mother Jackson
- 72: A thirteen year old boy of Bilston in Staffordshire
- 73: What happened at the April assizes we no not know
- 74: Was a physician at Northampton
- 75: 1618 19 under examination in that county
- 76: Royal Progresses to Leicester Leicester
- 77: And that Baddeley ignored the second one
- 78: Familiar with the story of the feast at Malking Tower
- 79: His success prompted him to concoct new tales
- 80: Or had they never heard of the famous boy at Bilston
- 81: More likely the king and the privy council
- 82: Why Lancashire should have been so infested with witches
- 83: Thomas Heywood and Richard Brome
- 84: Hee said shee was very distrustful at first
- 85: Has copied the deposition given by Whitaker
- 86: 26 Farington Papers Chetham Soc
- 87: Thence removing to Manningtree
- 88: The court records give the testimony of Hopkins and Stearne
- 89: In the women condemned at Chelmsford
- 90: Four searchers were appointed for the county
- 91: Samuel Fairclough and Edmund Calamy the elder
- 92: The chief charge against Mother Lakeland
- 93: And had received but six pounds in Aldeburgh
- 94: Hopkins's work in Huntingdonshire prospered
- 95: The witchfinder had been active for a little over a year
- 96: Asserted the virtuous witchfinder
- 97: Within the year Hopkins died at his old home in Manningtree
- 98: The Anglicans were fighting for their king
- 99: The coming of Hopkins and Stearne gave them their chance
- 100: The imps could not approach her
- 101: Who called himself Witchfinder General
- 102: 12 Despite this record Anne West is described by Stearne p
- 103: 25 Suffolk Institute of Archaeology
- 104: 30 A True Relation of the Araignment of eighteene Witches
- 105: Had signed his soul away Stearne
- 106: Notes or Jottings about Aldeburgh
- 107: Yet his agreement with Stearne in numbers is remarkable
- 108: The epidemic of 1649 came from Scotland
- 109: The children of George Muschamp
- 110: All at the instigation of Anne Bodenham
- 111: When Mistress Bodenham had been hanged
- 112: Joan Read of Devizes had been reported to be a witch
- 113: By 1653 the equilibrium of England had been restored
- 114: The Mallorys were a prominent family in Yorkshire
- 115: By far the greatest activity seems to have been in Middlesex
- 116: John Palmer and Elizabeth Knott
- 117: The Histories of Launceston and Dunheved Plymouth
- 118: Sadducismus Triumphatus London
- 119: Witchcraft had been specifically reserved
- 120: Ex emplified specially in the Doctrine of Witchcraft
- 121: How was then a minister of Geneva bewitched to death
- 122: His work he dedicated to the two judges at Taunton
- 123: We shall meet with Casaubon again
- 124: Ady stood eminently for good sense
- 125: Which commonly are call'd Witches
- 126: That whosoever should turn his Hat thrice and cry Buz
- 127: Who reported the Lancaster cases of 1612
- 128: If they did not discredit witchcraft
- 129: Cotta speaks of the case as six years earlier
- 130: 40 In passing we must mention Richard Farnworth
- 131: Which follows that of 1651 1652
- 132: For an expression about the persecution in 1645
- 133: Where an incendiary witch was sentenced
- 134: Of those finally hanged for witchcraft
- 135: A woman who was nothing more than a midwife
- 136: The trial concerned two women of Lowestoft
- 137: Pacy would have been laughed out of court
- 138: As to the existence of witches
- 139: But the alderman of Malmesbury
- 140: But where the outcome was very different
- 141: Till Glanvill was thoroughly taken in
- 142: Which resulted in a verdict of acquittal
- 143: The Devonshire women were half witted creatures
- 144: Which in 1649 had sent to Scotland for a witchfinder
- 145: Whom Hannah Crump had consulted
- 146: Memoirs and Travels of Sir John Reresby London
- 147: Glanvill and webster and the literary war over witchcraft
- 148: Together with the cabalistic notions he had absorbed
- 149: Glanvill put the issue squarely
- 150: Those that give up the belief in witches
- 151: Nor would Casaubon have wished to do so
- 152: 28 Casaubon added nothing new
- 153: From that time Webster had been a doubter
- 154: By reason of their obscenity and filthiness
- 155: Hallywell a logical but dull reasoner from the Bible
- 156: 54 This was Glanvill over again
- 157: Glanvill was an exceedingly original man
- 158: Greenslet's excellent book on Glanvill
- 159: 28 The Opinion of Witchcraft Vindicated
- 160: Displaying of Supposed Witchcraft
- 161: That of Heywood and Brome in 1634
- 162: The affair started at the village of Surey
- 163: 12 He hastened to publish The Surey Impostor
- 164: Two years later Holt tried Elizabeth Horner at Exeter
- 165: Jane Wenham came into the room
- 166: Strutt used the test of the Lord's Prayer
- 167: It was the Dugdale case over again
- 168: The widow Coman that was counted a witch was buried
- 169: Entituled The Surey Demoniack London
- 170: 20 Hutchinson had Holt's notes on this case
- 171: Examination and Condemnation of Jane Wenham
- 172: Matthew Gilston and Anne Thorne
- 173: Although Glanvill was an Anglican
- 174: He touched on witchcraft in passing
- 175: 1 Witchcraft Farther Displayed
- 176: Witchcraft under Elizabeth see ch
- 177: The second Chelmsford trials were also in 1579
- 178: Discovery of the Fraudulent Practices of John Darrel
- 179: And Charlewood printed between 1562 and 1593
- 180: The scratchinge of the wytches
- 181: A brief Apologie proving the possession of William Sommers
- 182: By John Deacon and John Walker
- 183: Extracts from it are given by Harsnett
- 184: Together with the Arraignement and Triall of Jennet Preston
- 185: Goodcole refers to the ballets written about this case
- 186: Its details are amplified by Stearne
- 187: At the Assizes held in Worcester on Tuseday the 4th of March
- 188: Witchcraft condemn'd in Anne Bodenham
- 189: Johnson the Minister of Wappin
- 190: A Full and True Relation of The Tryal
- 191: Or the Tryals and Condemnation of three Notorious Witches
- 192: For being a Witch at Surry Assizes
- 193: Confess'd and fully Proved on the Surey Dissenters
- 194: Practis'd by Jane Wenham of Walkerne in Hertfordshire
- 195: A Defense of the Proceedings against Jane Wenham
- 196: That it was made over from the Chelmsford pamphlet of 1645
- 197: No Chelmsford witch had made that boast
- 198: Have belonged to some Huntingdonshire county family
- 199: Mother Lakeland in 1645 was burned
- 200: If the two executions in 1705 be disproved
- 201: Including probably Lady Frances Throgmorton
- 202: At the Assise of Burntwood in July
- 203: Randoll alone executed
- 204: Report on the Records of Colchester Colchester
- 205: Hertfordshire County Session Rolls
- 206: Alse Gooderidge 1597
- 207: Oliffe Bartham of Shadbrook executed
- 208: And of Sir Edward Coke to Viscount Craybourne
- 209: Three Centuries of Derbyshire Annals
- 210: Wonderfull Discoverie of Witches
- 211: Middlesex County Records
- 212: Louth Old Corporation Records
- 213: Strange and true Discovery of a Witch
- 214: History of Stowmarket Ipswich
- 215: Notes or Jottings about Aldeburgh
- 216: Middlesex County Records
- 217: Middlesex County Records
- 218: Middlesex County Records
- 219: Sadducismus Triumphatus 1681
- 220: Hertfordshire County Sessions Rolls
- 221: Hertfordshire County Sessions Rolls
- 222: Mentioned by Inderwick as acquitted in Cornwall
- 223: Jane Vallet acquitted on three indictments
- 224: Elizabeth Horner acquitted on three indictments
- 225: See footnotes to chapter XIII and app
- 226: 326 Autobiography of Edward Underhill
- 227: Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield
- 228: A History of Witchcraft in England from 1558 to 17
- 229: 389 Butler's Hudibras on Matthew Hopkins
- 230: Growth of skepticism as to witches in his reign
- 231: 388 Collection of Modern Relations
- 232: 404 Criminal Chronology of York Castle
- 233: Vicar general of the Bishop of
- 234: Spectral evidence in her reign
- 235: A History of Witchcraft in England from 1558 to 17
- 236: See Francis North Gunpowder Plot
- 237: A History of Witchcraft in England from 1558 to 17
- 238: His ruling on the water ordeal
- 239: Neglect of legal restriction on
- 240: A History of Witchcraft in England from 1558 to 17
- 241: 397 Leicestershire and Rutland
- 242: Use of as a test of witchcraft
- 243: And passim thereafter Middleton
- 244: 411 Northamptonshire Handbook
- 245: Formulated theory concerning pacts with Satan
- 246: In the Lancashire trials of 1633
- 247: A History of Witchcraft in England from 1558 to 17
- 248: 417 Saint Andrew's in Holborne
- 249: House and Farm Accounts of the
- 250: See Master Thompson Sowerbutts
- 251: 412 Sussex Archaeological Collections
- 252: Hopkins's and Stearne's theory and practice as to
- 253: Practised by Hopkins and Stearne
- 254: Her trial the occasion of Hutchinson's book
- 255: Proportion of to men in indictments for witchcraft
