Caution! The subject of this blog may upset some.
I recently posted a picture of Moosham Castle on my Facebook page, this formidable looking edifice was the centre of one of the most shocking witch trials that I have read about, and it has raised a lot of questions in my mind.
Back in 1675, a woman by the name of Barbara Kollerin was arrested on suspicion of theft and sorcery, and quite quickly, in what I suppose was a vain attempt to save her life (let’s face it, 17th century Europe and she’s accused of witchcraft, the chances of her walking away were slim…) told the authorities that her son Paul Jacob Koller had made a pact with Satan. Twenty year old Paul was the son of a known executioner, and that alone was enough to raise concerns amongst the ruling classes.
Soon the hunt began for this “hideous” creature who was riding out with the devil and causing chaos wherever he went…it took the powers that be two years before they arrested a twelve year old disabled beggar known as “Dirty Animal” who began to paint an incredible picture of Mr Koller. The boy Dionysos (his real name), described Koller as what we would probably call a Fagin-esque type character, a leader of beggars and homeless children who not only taught them how to steal and con people out of money, but also black magic.
You can imagine the hysteria which followed, in fact, the more of these destitute youngsters that they arrested, the more fantastical the descriptions of Koller became. He was said to be able to make himself invisible in order to conduct his rituals, he was able to enchant destructive rodents to ravage the farmers crops (the harvest had been particularly bad that year, and of course witch craft was to blame) and he was said to be a murderer and such a scary one at that, that officials pretended to stop wanting to capture him.
As the hysteria amplified, executions began, and this is where it really is shocking and awful to read. Over the course of these witch trials (and the newly named Wizard Jackl was never caught, if he existed at all) one hundred and thirty nine people died, 81% of them being male but that is not so shocking more of a surprise when we look at the myriad of other witch trials pervading Europe and the Americas…what is absolutely terrible is that thirty nine of the executed where children between the ages of 10 and 14, and that fifty three were teenagers and younger adults (15 to 21). The youngest was a wee boy of 10 called Hannerl, the oldest, Margarethe, an 80 year old woman.
Some of the children arrested and not executed had their hands cut off, and were branded on their chests with hot irons, marched through the streets of Salzburg as a warning to others…but many were burned, some were hanged or decapitated first, but many were thrown alive to the flames.
Whilst the ages of those accused and killed is bad enough, it is the fact that only two of the total number were not beggars or homeless, was it really a witch hunt or was it a way of culling the perceived undesirables to remove the fear of them spreading disease and basically not looking very appealing?
You decide…..