ID | Short Description | Date | City | Parish | Current County | Old county | Nation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 | Elizabeth Francis alleges in her confession that she kept Sathan for 15 or 16 years before tiring of him. At that time, she gave Sathan to Mother Agnes Waterhouse in exchange for a cake. Francis also passed on the instructions her grandmother, Eve of Hatfield Peverel, had given her, to give Sathan blood and feed him with milk and bread.(9, 12-13)
Appears in:
Phillips, John. The Examination and Confession of Certain Witches. London: 1566, 9, 12-13
|
1557 | Hatfield Peverel | Hatfield Peverel | Essex | Essex | England |
240 | Mother Agnes Waterhouse alleges in her confession that, after she received the familiar Sathan from Elizabeth Francis, she decided to try him out by asking him to kill one of her hogs. When he did, she gave him a chicken and a drop of her blood as payment.(13-14)
Appears in:
Phillips, John. The Examination and Confession of Certain Witches. London: 1566, 13-14
|
1557 | Hatfield Peverel | Hatfield Peverel | Essex | Essex | England |
570 | Mother Agnes Waterhouse alleges in her confession that she had "yued somwhat vnquietly" with her husband and for this reason caused Sathan to kill him. This was about nine years prior to her trial, and she had lived as a widow since.(13, 15)
Appears in:
Phillips, John. The Examination and Confession of Certain Witches. London: 1566, 13, 15
|
1557 | Hatfield Peverel | Hatfield Peverel | Essex | Essex | England |
703 | Mother Agnes Waterhouse alleges in her confession that she once became offended by Father Kersye, and instructed Sathan to kill three of Father Kersye's hogs. After Sathan carried out the request, Mother Waterhouse rewarded him with a chicken and a drop of blood. Sathan ate the chicken in its entirety, leaving no bones or feathers behind.(12, 13-14)
Appears in:
Phillips, John. The Examination and Confession of Certain Witches. London: 1566, 12, 13-14
|
1557 | Hatfield Peverel | Hatfield Peverel | Essex | Essex | England |
704 | Mother Agnes Waterhouse alleges in her confession that she had a falling out with Widow Gooday and instructed Sathan to drown Gooday's cow. When Sathan did so, she rewarded him with a drop of blood and another chicken.(13, 15)
Appears in:
Phillips, John. The Examination and Confession of Certain Witches. London: 1566, 13, 15
|
1557 | Hatfield Peverel | Hatfield Peverel | Essex | Essex | England |
705 | Mother Agnes Waterhouse alleges in her confession that she had a falling out with one of her neighbours (Anonymous 67) and instructed Sathan to kill three of that neighbour's geese.(13, 15)
Appears in:
Phillips, John. The Examination and Confession of Certain Witches. London: 1566, 13, 15
|
1557 | Hatfield Peverel | Hatfield Peverel | Essex | Essex | England |
706 | Mother Agnes Waterhouse alleges in her confession that she was once refused yeast and in revenge instructed Sathan to "destroye the brewing at that tyme."(13, 15)
Appears in:
Phillips, John. The Examination and Confession of Certain Witches. London: 1566, 13, 15
|
1557 | Hatfield Peverel | Hatfield Peverel | Essex | Essex | England |
707 | Mother Agnes Waterhouse alleges that her neighbour, Anonymous 68, refused to give her butter, and in revenge she caused this neighbour's curds to spoil two or three days later.(13, 15)
Appears in:
Phillips, John. The Examination and Confession of Certain Witches. London: 1566, 13, 15
|
1557 | Hatfield Peverel | Hatfield Peverel | Essex | Essex | England |
708 | Mother Agnes Waterhouse alleges in her confession that she had a falling out with her neighbours, Anonymous 85 and Anonymous 86, and sent Sathan to kill the husband, Anonymous 85, with a bloody flux. Once Anonymous 85 had died, she rewarded Sathan with a drop of blood and a chicken.(13, 15)
Appears in:
Phillips, John. The Examination and Confession of Certain Witches. London: 1566, 13, 15
|
1557 | Hatfield Peverel | Hatfield Peverel | Essex | Essex | England |
1590 | Joan Cocke indicted at the assizes in Brentwood for initially laying her hands on Richard Sherman's knees while in his house and then clapping her hands on his knees, allegedly causing him to become lame. (473)
Appears in:
Great Britain. Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, . Report of the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, Part 4. H.M. Stationery Office: 1885, 473
|
1557 | Brentwood | Essex | Essex | England | |
1591 | Joan Cocke's daughter (Anonymous 243) is suspected of being a witch because Noble's wife claims to be unable to properly churn her butter.()
Appears in:
Great Britain. Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, . Report of the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, Part 4. H.M. Stationery Office: 1885,
|
1557 | Brentwood | Essex | Essex | England | |
1592 | Joan Cocke's daughter (Anonymous 243) is suspected of using "witcherie" on Belfild's wife's cows causing one to die and two "miche neate" (dairy cows) to give milk of "all colours."()
Appears in:
Great Britain. Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, . Report of the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, Part 4. H.M. Stationery Office: 1885,
|
1557 | Brentwood | Essex | Essex | England |