Welsh Witches

Welsh Witches

  • $130.00


Welsh Witches

Narratives of Witchcraft and Magic

from 16th and 17th Century Wales

By RICHARD SUGGETT

Standard Edition: 250 pages, hardcover in buckram cloth, two colour foil block to front and back, gold foil block to spine, head and tail bands, natural wibalin endpapers bordering 100gm munken cream paper, ribbon. Ltd to 777 copies.

Authentic accounts of witchcraft accusations in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England and Wales are rare.  There is of course a sensational pamphlet literature based on witchcraft trials but this source can be problematic, especially as the trial documents have disappeared.  However, a rich archive of pre-trial documents relating to witchcraft accusations has been discovered in the records of the Court of Great Sessions of Wales.  These unique documents are the complaints of those who believed themselves bewitched, the depositions of witnesses, and the examinations of suspected witches. 

The Court of Great Sessions had the power of life and death and sent many convicted felons to the gallows. We know exactly when the first prosecution for murder by witchcraft took place in Wales.  In 1594 Gwen ferch Ellis of Denbighshire was tried for felonious witchcraft, found guilty and sentenced to be hanged. This case was something of a cause celebre. Remarkably the record survives of Gwen’s interrogation by the bishop of St Asaph as well as the depositions of her accusers.   

Written evidence survives from some 20 cases and these documents are printed in full for the first time.  These texts reveal remarkable details and personalities that have remained hidden in the documentary record for over 300 years.  In these cases we encounter cursers and healers, practitioners of image magic and love magic, confidence tricksters and believers in fairies.  

The book has a comprehensive introduction and detailed commentaries on the cases.  There is a definitive list of prosecutions with abstracts of indictments.  A calendar of slander cases involving accusations of witchcraft provides a glimpse of witchcraft accusations that never resulted in prosecution as well as an insight into the vocabulary of witchcraft.  The study makes a vital contribution to the understanding of witchcraft beliefs in one of the ‘dark corners’ of the British Isles.

 

 

 


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