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A History of Scottish Witches: The Devil's Handmaidens explores the phenomenon of witch persecution in Scotland between 1563 and 1736. Looking at the influence of the likes of John Knox and James VI of Scotland, this book examines the magic and fairy beliefs that underlay witchcraft and how this became twisted by the Scottish Kirk's obsession with the Devil. Using examples from actual trial records and so-called witch confessions, this book explores how societal norms surrounding women caused so many to face the rope and the flames and how those norms were exacerbated by the chaos of the reformation and the wars of the Three Kingdoms. How did the magical beliefs of ordinary people become twisted into Devil worship? And why did so many come to believe this? How did the Scottish church and the courts fall into a frenzy of belief that the Devil was around every corner, causing terror across Lowland Scotland, and how did they extract themselves from that frenzy? Finally, the book looks at how this period of persecution affected the ordinary people of Scotland and what lessons it might hold for today. AUTHOR: Mary W. Craig is a Scottish writer and historian. She is a former Carnegie scholar and holds a Master's degree in History from the University of Glasgow. Mary researches and writes about various aspects of the social history of Scotland as well as giving talks, lectures and hosting a podcast, Borders Bletherings, where she explores the history of the Scottish Borders. She has a particular interest in the ordinary Scots persecuted as witches in the late 16th and 17th centuries. Mary is a member of Scottish PEN and is the author of Borders Witch Hunt and Agnes Finnie: the Witch of the Potterrow Port. 30 b/w illustrations
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A History of Scottish Witches: The Devil's Handmaidens explores the phenomenon of witch persecution in Scotland between 1563 and 1736. Looking at the influence of the likes of John Knox and James VI of Scotland, this book examines the magic and fairy beliefs that underlay witchcraft and how this became twisted by the Scottish Kirk's obsession with the Devil. Using examples from actual trial records and so-called witch confessions, this book explores how societal norms surrounding women caused so many to face the rope and the flames and how those norms were exacerbated by the chaos of the reformation and the wars of the Three Kingdoms. How did the magical beliefs of ordinary people become twisted into Devil worship? And why did so many come to believe this? How did the Scottish church and the courts fall into a frenzy of belief that the Devil was around every corner, causing terror across Lowland Scotland, and how did they extract themselves from that frenzy? Finally, the book looks at how this period of persecution affected the ordinary people of Scotland and what lessons it might hold for today. AUTHOR: Mary W. Craig is a Scottish writer and historian. She is a former Carnegie scholar and holds a Master's degree in History from the University of Glasgow. Mary researches and writes about various aspects of the social history of Scotland as well as giving talks, lectures and hosting a podcast, Borders Bletherings, where she explores the history of the Scottish Borders. She has a particular interest in the ordinary Scots persecuted as witches in the late 16th and 17th centuries. Mary is a member of Scottish PEN and is the author of Borders Witch Hunt and Agnes Finnie: the Witch of the Potterrow Port. 30 b/w illustrations