ID | Short Description | Date | City | Parish | Current County | Old county | Nation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1338 | John Tatterson asks Anne Greene for help while feeling ill. She advises that black wool will help, but he is skeptical. Greene then pulls out her garter, runs it around his ear three times, and then takes hair from his neck. Shortly after this, Tatterson feels worse; however, after returning and threatening Greene, she crosses his ear again (three times). Tatterson begins to heal as "corruptible matter [runs] outt of his eare."(65)
Appears in:
Raine, James. Depositions from the Castle of York. Unknown: 1861, 65
|
1653, February 16 | Gargreave | Gargrave | Yorkshire | Yorkshire | England |
1339 | Anne Greene allegedly tells Jeanette Hudson that John Tatterson "was overgone with ill tongues, and that hee should have one side taken from him."(64)
Appears in:
Raine, James. Depositions from the Castle of York. Unknown: 1861, 64
|
1653, February 16 | Gargreave | Gargrave | Yorkshire | Yorkshire | England |
1340 | Anne Greene and Mary Nunweeke allegedly appear in the form of dogs to Margaret Wade while she is in bed.(64)
Appears in:
Raine, James. Depositions from the Castle of York. Unknown: 1861, 64
|
1653, February 16 | Gargreave | Gargrave | Yorkshire | Yorkshire | England |
1341 | Anne Greene confesses that she sometimes used charms to heal hearts, including John Tatterson's. When she healed Tatterson's heart, she did so"by crosseinge a garter over his eare and sayeinge these words, 'Boate, a God's Name' 9 times over."(64)
Appears in:
Raine, James. Depositions from the Castle of York. Unknown: 1861, 64
|
1653, February 16 | Gargreave | Gargrave | Yorkshire | Yorkshire | England |