Orkney to get memorial for island witch trial victims


Records show that at least 19 women and one man went on trial in Orkney accused of witchcraft between 1594 and 1645 with just under half of them (nine) executed by burning and strangling.
Others were banished with one woman branded after being found guilty of using charms.
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Hide AdThe introduction of the Witchcraft Act in 1563 made witchcraft and consulting witches a capital crime. More than 4,000 people were accused of witchcraft with torture used to extract confessions and secure guilty verdicts.
Calls for a memorial were led by a group on Orkney with stonemason Colin Watson, who worked at St Magnus Cathedral for more than 30 years, now working on the design.
It is understood the memorial, to be placed at Gallow Ha’, where many of the executions took place, will include the words ‘they wur cheust folk’.
One particularly grim case on Orkney led Alesoun Balfour of Stenness to be implicated in the murder plot of Earl Patrick Stewart.
His servant Thomas Papley was accused of the killing and kept for 11 days and 11 night in the cashielaws, an iron framt which was gradually heated up to burn skin and draw out a confession, according to heritage site orkneyjar.com
After being stripped and lashed with ropes, Paplay named Alison Balfour as an accomplice.
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Hide AdBalfour was seized and tortured by Henry Colville, the parson of Orphir, and Earl Patrick Stewart’s close friend.
She was taken to Kirkwall Castle where her legs were put in the caschilaws, according to accounts
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Hide AdWithout any confession after 48 hours, her husband, then aged 81, and two children were brought in and tortured infront of her.
According to orkneyjar.com, her husband was placed in the ‘lang irons’ in a bid to crush him with fifty stones of weight placed on top of him. Her son was placed in torture boots where his feet were battered with mallets and her seven-year-old daughter had her fingers crushed in the piniwinkies, or thumscrews.
It was at this point that Balfour broke - and confessed to witchcraft.
She was sentenced to die at “Heiding Hill” - presumably Gallow Ha’ - in Kirkwall on December 15, 1594.
Here, she withdrew her confession but the execution went ahead and she was strangled and burnt at the stake.
Two years later, John Stewart, Master of Orkney, was charged with “Consulting with witches, for [the] destruction of [the] Earl of Orkney”.
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Hide AdHe was tried in Edinburgh but acquitted. The evidence used against Alison Balfour was thrown out of court on the basis it had been obtained under torture.
According to the Scottish Witch Survey, other known Orkney people put on trial for witchcraft were:
Katherine Bigland - 1615
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Hide AdTried in the Court of the Bishopric of Orkney, strangled and burnt
Helen A Wallis - 1616
Tried at Orkney Sheriff Court, punishment unknown
Marable Couper - 1624
At first banished, but then strangled and burnt
Katherine Cragie - 1640
Strangled and burnt
Janet Drever - 1615
Ordered to be ‘scrudgit’ - or beaten- from one end of Kirkwall to the other and then banished
Katherene Grieve - 1633
Branded and warned she would be burnt if caught again using charms
Helen Isbuster - 1635
Denunciation
James Knarstoun - 1633
Tried in sheriff court, punishment unknown
Marion Layland - 1633
Strangled and burnt
Jonet Reid - 1643
Found guilty of charming, but still executed
Jonet Rendall - 1629
Tried at sheriff court, punishment unknown
Elspeth Reoch - 1616
Executed
Effie Rosie - 1658
Banished after being found guilty of local session at Burray
Margaret Sandieson - 1635
Tried at sheriff court, punishment unknown
Geillis Sclaitter - 1616
Tried at sheriff court, punishment unknown
Bessie Skebister - 1633
Strangled and burnt
Anie Tailzeour - 1624
Strangled and burnt
Agnes Tulloch - 1616
Tried at sheriff court, punishment unknown