witchcraft investigation of Elspeth Reoch (Q112896837)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
historical event recorded in 16th-18th century Scotland
- Case of Elspeth Reoch
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | witchcraft investigation of Elspeth Reoch |
historical event recorded in 16th-18th century Scotland |
|
Statements
Two men she met at a loch told her to take an egg and roast it and use the sweat of it to wash her hands, and then to rub her eyes with unwashed hands to get the sight of anything she should want to know. [Possible allusion to one of the miracles of Christ when he spits in the dirt and washes a blind man's eyes and he can see?]. The black man at the loch turned out to be a fairy man who was also a dead kinsmen of hers. He came to her when she was in childbirth. She also seemed to know things abour herbs (specifically Merefow (?) to cause a nose bleed). (English)
She confessed to dealings with the fairy from the age of 12. Lots of detail about her meetings with them. She also seems to have been pregnant at least two times by different men. It is unclear if she was married. She claimed to be dumb and travelled around making a living off of her claim to have second sight. A very interesting case. [D. Purkiss claims that this case is about incest, in 'Reading Witchcraft' ed. S. Clark]She claimsed she was made dumb by a non-natural being who the prosecutors called the devil. Two men visited her by a loch side and told her how to get second sight. Two years later she was delivering a baby and the black man appeared again, he told her he was a fairy and a kinsman. He pressured her to have sex with him. After this she lost the power of speech. Her brother beat her to try to get her to speak, they prayed for her at the kirk three sundays - nothing worked. She made a trade of her second sight.She tried to procure an abortion for someone. (English)
Devil type: Male, Described as "in black" (English)
Devil type: Male, Described as "in green tartan" (English)
Devil type: Male Fairy, Described as "who was her kinsman" (English)