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Magdalena Bendzisławska (fl. late 17th century) was a Polish doctor and surgeon for miners of the Wieliczka Salt Mine and their families. She is considered the first official female surgeon in the history. [1] [2]
Barbara Królka (died 1664 [1] or 1670 [2]), was a Polish alleged witch. Her case was among the more famed of Polish witch trials. [citation needed] She was accused of having cast a spell upon Wacław Jeziorkowski and his family. Królka was also blamed for having caused by magic the plague which took place almost fifty years earlier in 1624.
Anna Stanisławska (1651 – 2 June 1701) was a Polish author and poet known for her sole work, Transakcja albo opisanie całego życia jednej sieroty przez żałosne treny od tejże samej pisane roku 1685 (Transaction, or a Description of the Whole Life of an Orphan Girl through Doleful Laments Written by the Same in 1685).
Researchers recreated the face of a 17th century woman buried with a sickle across her neck and a ... the corpse of a young woman found in northern Poland would have been unable to rise from her ...
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:17th-century Polish people. It includes Polish people that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Subcategories
This type of practice became common throughout Poland in the 17th century, as a response to a reported vampire epidemic. ... who was also on the research team that found Zosia, said the woman's ...
Katarzyna Weiglowa (Wajglowa) (German: Katherine Weigel; given erroneously in a Polish source of 17c. as Vogel (c.1459-1539), and known in many English sources as Catherine Vogel [a]; c. 1460 – 19 April 1539) was a Polish woman who was burned at the stake for apostasy by the Polish Inquisition.
The story of Katarzyna Paprocka was shown in a literary form in a book Czarownice z Pomorza i Kujaw (pol. Witches from Pomerania and Kujawy) Anna Koprowska-Głowacka. . According to the short story, the first husband of the woman was Daniel Nosowski , [9] and the court documents, which were transported to Warsaw, caused a great