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Related: About this forumI was asked to cross post this from the AWPS group
Why the witch-hunt victims of early modern Britain have come back to haunt usilias Addies body was piled into a wooden box and buried beneath a half-tonne sandstone slab on the foreshore where a dark North Sea laps the Fife coast. More than a hundred years later, she was exhumed by opportunistic Victorian gravediggers and her bones unusually large for a woman living in the early 18th century were later put on show at the Empire exhibition in Glasgow. Her simple coffin was carved into a wooden walking stick engraved Lilias Addie, 1704 which ended up in the collection of Andrew Carnegie, then the richest man in the world.
It was no sort of burial, but from the perspective of the thousands of women accused of, and executed for, witchcraft in early modern Britain, Liliass fate had a degree of dignity.
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Most women were burned, rather than buried, their identities erased by authorities and families out of fear and shame, says Claire Mitchell QC, who is campaigning for a legal pardon for, and monument to, the estimated 2,558 Scots who were executed in the brutal centuries of femicide after Scotlands 1563 Witchcraft Act (the same year England enacted its own bloody statute). She adds: This lack of historical record makes it harder as a society to have the reckoning with history that we dearly need to have.
If its a case of cultural amnesia, its hiding in plain sight. Halloween 2021 and online fast-fashion retailers are jolly with witchy inspo: cross-fusions of witch costumes and bunny girl outfits; miniature pointed hats worn at a jaunty angle, with a lipglossed pout. Meanwhile, designer Viktor & Rolf riffs on wicked witches in its haute couture shows (raven-winged leathers and laser eyes); witchcore trends on social media (an interior and lifestyle aesthetic centred on dark interiors, gemstones and, oddly, bread-baking); and influencers including the Modern Witch peddle a novel iteration of magical capitalism (spell-casting for business curse-removal, anyone?).
It was no sort of burial, but from the perspective of the thousands of women accused of, and executed for, witchcraft in early modern Britain, Liliass fate had a degree of dignity.
Advertisement
Most women were burned, rather than buried, their identities erased by authorities and families out of fear and shame, says Claire Mitchell QC, who is campaigning for a legal pardon for, and monument to, the estimated 2,558 Scots who were executed in the brutal centuries of femicide after Scotlands 1563 Witchcraft Act (the same year England enacted its own bloody statute). She adds: This lack of historical record makes it harder as a society to have the reckoning with history that we dearly need to have.
If its a case of cultural amnesia, its hiding in plain sight. Halloween 2021 and online fast-fashion retailers are jolly with witchy inspo: cross-fusions of witch costumes and bunny girl outfits; miniature pointed hats worn at a jaunty angle, with a lipglossed pout. Meanwhile, designer Viktor & Rolf riffs on wicked witches in its haute couture shows (raven-winged leathers and laser eyes); witchcore trends on social media (an interior and lifestyle aesthetic centred on dark interiors, gemstones and, oddly, bread-baking); and influencers including the Modern Witch peddle a novel iteration of magical capitalism (spell-casting for business curse-removal, anyone?).
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/oct/24/why-the-witch-hunt-victims-of-early-modern-britain-have-come-back-to-haunt-us?fbclid=IwAR0SvsumVHx3IDA5vkvMe-m-zpJCz-JVrpdajavy7PNPDGtj3XE-A0U_Xbw
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I was asked to cross post this from the AWPS group (Original Post)
icymist
Oct 2021
OP
niyad
(119,939 posts)1. Thank you so much for doing this. The femicide, the woman-hating, at the core of
The Burning Times, is alive and well today. Women identified as witches are murdered in Africa. Rwnj's/evangelicals and assorted ultra-conservative religionists in the US talk of executing witches in this third decade of the 21st century. And for pretty much the same reasons. Women refusing to submit to male/church dominance. Daring to live their own lives on their own terms.
Again, thank you for this.
niyad
(119,939 posts)2. Re you familiar with "The Burning Times" by Charlie Murphy? Or "We Won't Wait
Any Longer" by Gwydion Penderrwen? Your post reminded me to go listen to them again, so, once again, thank you.
icymist
(15,888 posts)3. (((Gwydion Penderrwen)))
~Sigh~