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Posted
on January 5, 2009 at 3:21 PM
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WHAT happened on Halloween 1590 in North Berwick is up for debate. What is certain is that the fragments of evidence handed down through centuries is a witches' brew of intrigue.
Some
200 witches met in Saint Andrew's Auld Kirk to raise the devil to help
them kill the King. Or, it was on that day that King James VI said
a witches coven assembled to conjure up a storm to drown him and his
new wife Anne of Denmark as they sailed up the Firth of Forth to Leith.
Whether it was true that witches gathered to plot his doom is
debatable, but it was enough evidence for King James, who saw his top
two fears made clear: treason and witchcraft.

Saint Andrew's Auld Kirk, North Berwick, as it appears today.
When
the alleged witches confessed under extreme torture a gruesome tale
emerged. One accused claimed their horned master had commanded them to
open up four graves and remove toe, finger and knee joints from the
corpses. They told of throwing a dead cat with the organs of a corpse
into the sea in order to raise the storm. Accounts of the confession of
Agnes Sampson describe a black mass in the church with dancing,
prayers, incantations and black candles.
Another so-called
witch, Dr John Fian (also known as Cunningham), was a local
schoolmaster. The good doctor revealed in his confession that he
carried mole's feet as a talisman and that he kissed the devil's behind
as he worshipped him. He further alleged that the devil was in fact
Francis Stuart, 5th Earl of Bothwell, and that they had been commanded
by Bothwell to make a wax image of the King and chant over it: "This is Jamie the Saxth, orderit tae be consumed be a noble man."
To
James VI, a devout Calvinist, it all seemed frighteningly plausible, as
his ship had almost capsized on his way back from Denmark. Bothwell was
James's cousin and his family had been contenders to the throne for
three generations. Convinced of his narrow escape he personally
presided over the trials of the North Berwick witches. In doing so he
helped to legitimise the anti-witch sentiment, which sparked off a wave
of similar trials throughout Scotland during the 16th and 17th century.
The
newly reformed church also played a central role in whipping up this
fever. Accusations of witchcraft could be made anonymously by leaving a
note in a box, and the church handed over their information to the
authorities. Records show that at least 3,837 people were accused of
witchcraft in Scotland. It is not known how many were put to death; it
could be between 60 to 70 per cent of this number. The vast majority
was women. Many suffered excruciating torture. A terrible number were
strangled and their bodies burnt.
Yet Dr Julian
Goodare, who helped set up the Survey of Scottish Witchcraft Database
at Edinburgh University, remains unconvinced that the North Berwick
coven actually happened.
"Whether the meeting really took place
I doubt," says Goodare. "There are so many incredible elements to it
that it looks like the invention of people under torture."
Today's
sleepy North Berwick holds little reminder of these tragic times, apart
from a small "witches' stane" - a rough stone left in nearby Spott that
commemorates those who died. People undoubtedly remain fascinated by
the stories of the witches. Roy Pugh, a local historian based in
Dunbar, wrote The Deil's Ain, a history of witchcraft in Scotland.
Roy
stresses that witches could be anyone that found disfavour in the
community, and were just ordinary individuals who became scapegoats in
difficult times. "Fishing villages are very superstitious places and in
rural areas with uneducated people, if there was no obvious reason for
your chickens not laying or your calf dying, then you made one up.
"The
most common indictment for witchcraft was whose turn is it to clean the
stair or rake the dung heap. They would argue and one would say 'the
devil curse you'. Later a child (of the person cursed) might fall sick
and the church would be told what had happened."
The
incredible confessions that came out of people still challenge
historians today. Defendants would speak of flying through the air or
changing into an animal using their spells, and they confessed to
making a pact with the devil. Most agree that these admissions were the
product of horrific torture instruments, such as the witch's bridle, a
padlocked frame, which fitted over the head with a sharpened crucifix
inside the mouth. Defendants were also deprived of sleep - often for
weeks - before trial. However, there is also a general consensus that
not all of the confessions were made up, but rather the people involved
may have had herb-lore or practiced superstitious rites.
Despite
these rational explanations, even today there are signs that people
continue to believe in the power of witches. As a child, Roy says he
was told to leave a coin on the witch stane, and often when he passes
someone has left a small offering.
A small, present-day reminder of the Halloween that shook Scotland more than 400 years ago.