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Bewitching of Anne Gunter

Bewitching of Anne Gunter

James Sharpe

About this book

In 1604, 20-year-old Anne Gunter was bewitched: she foamed at the mouth, contorted wildly in her bedchamber, went into trances. Her garters and bodices were perpetually unlacing themselves. Her signature symptom was to vomit pins and "she voided some pins downwards as well by her water or otherwise.." Popular history at its best, "The Bewitching of Anne Gunter" opens a fascinating window onto the past. It's a tale of controlling fathers, willful daughters, nosy neighbors, power relations between peasants and gentry, and village life in early-modern Europe. Above all it's an original and revealing story of one young woman's experience with the greatly misunderstood phenomenon of witchcraft. James Sharpe is Professor of History at York University and the author of "Instruments of Darkness: Witchcraft in" "Early Modern History" and other works of social history.

Details

OL Work ID
OL25691338W

Subjects

James i, king of england, 1566-1625Trials (witchcraft)Trials, great britainGreat britain, history, stuarts, 1603-1714Witchcraft, great britain

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.