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8 - Witchcraft and fantasy in early modern Germany

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2010

Jonathan Barry
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
Marianne Hester
Affiliation:
University of Bristol
Gareth Roberts
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
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Summary

In January 1669, Anna Ebeler found herself accused of murdering the woman for whom she had worked as a lying-in maid. The means was a bowl of soup. Instead of restoring the young mother's strength, the soup, made of malmsey and brandy in place of Rhine wine, had increased her fever. The mother became delirious but, as the watchers at her deathbed claimed, she was of sound mind when she blamed the lying-in maid for her death. As word spread, other women came forward stating that Ebeler had poisoned their young children too. The child of one had lost its baby flesh and its whole little body had become pitifully thin and dried out. Another's child had been unable to suckle from its mother, even though it was greedy for milk and able to suck vigorously from other women: shortly after, it died in agony. In a third house, an infant had died after its body had suddenly become covered in hot, poisonous pustules and blisters which broke open. The baby's 7-year-old brother suffered from aches and pains caused by sorcery and saw strange visions, his mother suffered from headaches and the whole household started to notice strange growths on their bodies. And a fourth woman found her infant covered with red splotches and blisters, her baby's skin drying out until it could be peeled off like a shirt. The child died most piteously, and its mother's menstruation ceased.

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Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe
Studies in Culture and Belief
, pp. 207 - 236
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1996

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