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  2. Witchcraft Acts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witchcraft_Acts

    Under the Scottish Witchcraft Act 1563, enacted effective 4 June 1563, [7] both the practice of witchcraft and consulting with witches were capital offences. [8] This Act remained on Scottish statute books until it was repealed as a result of a House of Lords amendment to the bill for the post-union Witchcraft Act 1735.

  3. Witches of Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witches_of_Scotland

    In Scotland the Witchcraft Act remained in law till 1736. Witchcraft was a capital crime and punished by strangulation and burning at the stake. Claire Mitchell QC provides evidence that Scotland executed five times as many people per capita as anywhere else in Europe. [8] An estimated 3837 people were accused, 2558 of whom were killed.

  4. Witch trials in early modern Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witch_trials_in_early...

    The North Berwick Witches meet the Devil in the local kirkyard, from a contemporary pamphlet, Newes from Scotland. In early modern Scotland, in between the early 16th century and the mid-18th century, judicial proceedings concerned with the crimes of witchcraft (Scottish Gaelic: buidseachd) took place as part of a series of witch trials in Early Modern Europe.

  5. Aberdeen witch trials of 1596–1597 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aberdeen_witch_trials_of...

    Chris Croly, a historian at the University of Aberdeen, stated that Aberdeen’s Great Witch Hunt of 1597 should be seen as but one phase of a wave of witch persecutions across Scotland sparked by the witchcraft laws of King James VI but also that "it is often said that Aberdeen burned more witches than anywhere else — that may not be entirely accurate, but what is absolutely accurate is ...

  6. Great Scottish witch hunt of 1649–50 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Scottish_witch_hunt...

    The great Scottish witch hunt of 1649–50 was a series of witch trials in Scotland. It is one of five major hunts identified in early modern Scotland and it probably saw the most executions in a single year. The trials occurred in a period of economic, political and religious unrest. Political and religious turmoil was caused by defeat for the ...

  7. North Berwick witch trials - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Berwick_witch_trials

    The North Berwick Witches meet the Devil in the local kirkyard, from a contemporary pamphlet, Newes from Scotland. The North Berwick witch trials were the trials in 1590 of a number of people from East Lothian, Scotland, accused of witchcraft in the St Andrew's Auld Kirk in North Berwick on Halloween night. They ran for two years, and ...

  8. Witchcraft Act 1735 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witchcraft_Act_1735

    The Witchcraft Act 1735 (9 Geo. 2. c. 5) was an Act of the Parliament of the Kingdom of Great Britain in 1735 which made it a crime for a person to claim that any human being had magical powers or was guilty of practising witchcraft. With this, the law abolished the hunting and executions of witches in Great Britain.

  9. Survey of Scottish Witchcraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Survey_of_Scottish_Witchcraft

    Woodcut image from Newes from Scotland (1591) depicting the devil with Agnes Sampson, one of the witches detailed in the survey [1]. The Survey of Scottish Witchcraft is an online database of witch trials in early modern Scotland, containing details of 3,837 accused gathered from contemporary court documents covering the period from 1563 until the repeal of the Scottish Witchcraft Act in 1736. [2]