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Witches in Early Modern England icon

Witches in Early Modern England

7 results from this resource . Displaying 141 to 5
  • "A woman (Anonymous 4) is captured by the Army in Newbury and shot in the head, in 1634.", 'A Most Certain, Strange, and True Discovery of a Witch', Anonymous, (1643) (external link no longer available)

  • "A woman (Anonymous 4) is captured in Newbury by the army and determined to be a witch.", 'A Most Certain, Strange, and True Discovery of a Witch', Anonymous, (1643) (external link no longer available)

  • "A woman (Anonymous 4) is allegedly shot at by army soldiers in Newbury, but she catches the bullets they fire and eats them.", 'A Most Certain, Strange, and True Discovery of a Witch', Anonymous, (1643) (external link no longer available)

  • "A pond in Garraton turns from water to blood and is a supposed sign from God as to how the people are all of one blood.", 'The Most Strange and Wounderfull Apperation of Blood in a Pool at Garraton in Leicester-shire', Anonymous, London (1645) (external link no longer available)

  • "James Cook, Thomas Blossom, and Edward See witness the apparition of a battle horse in the sky over where the Battle of Dunbar had taken place.", 'More Warning Yet. Being a True Relation of a Strange and Most Dreadful Apparition which was Seen in the Air', Godly-learned minister of the Gospel., London (1654) (external link no longer available)

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