In 1711, eight women were tried for witchcraft in Ireland’s County Antrim. The case was one of only four witchcraft trials known in Ireland, and is one of the best-documented cases of witchcraft trials in the British Isles. Drawing on primary sources and historical research, this account is detailed enough for historians, yet accessible to general readers and students, with ample background and limited footnotes. The book includes b&w photos of primary documents, plus b&w primary source woodcuts. Annotation ©2014 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)
Accessibly written, expertly researched history of Ireland's only mass witchcraft trial in 1711.
The first comprehensive book on Ireland's only witchcraft trialIn 1711, in County Antrim, eight women were put on trial accused of orchestrating the demonic possession of young Mary Dunbar, and the haunting and supernatural murder of a local clergyman's wife. Mary Dunbar was the star witness in this trial, and the women were, by the standards of the time, believable witches—they smoke, they drank, and they just did not look right. With echoes of Arthur Miller's The Crucible, and in fact Mary Dunbar repeated many of the reports from the Salem witch trials word for word in court, this is a story murder, hysteria, and how the "witch craze" that claimed more than 400,000 lives in Europe played out on Irish shores.