‘The whelk ye freely confessed’: The Witch Trials in Crook of Devon
One day in the early spring, Isabel Rutherford got a knock on her door. We don’t know whether she had a husband, friends or children. We certainly know that she had enemies. Isabel was accused of witchcraft and confessed. On the 3rd of April she was tried and convicted for witchcraft. On 5 April, she was taken to Lamblaires, a field close to the Crook Mill. She was strangled and her body was burned at the stake. Were her friends and family there to say goodbye? Were her accusers there? We don’t know. Two other convicted witches were executed alongside her and more were to follow. The year is 1662; the place is Crook of Devon, a rural village in Kinross-shire in Scotland. 350 years ago, people believed in the existence of witches. This belief was so entrenched that in Scotland alone, thousands of people were accused of witchcraft and in many cases convicted and executed. Around 3,000 people were tried, although gaps in the records make an accurate count impossible. There could hav...

Comments
Post a Comment
Thank you! Be your nose a pointer for your brain! (OED)