For my first post on Cowboy Kisses I wanted to share something that I'd done a lot of research for, but also affected me emotionally and enabled me to write one of my main characters.
In my new Historical
Paranormal Western Romance, LAKOTA HONOR, Bounty Hunter, Otakatay is killing the
Witkowin—crazy women believed to be witches. For my research I delved into
where these women came from and why they were killed.
During the middle
ages, a midwife/healer/witch was often the person called for a mother in
labour, a broken limb, an amputation, an illness or pandemic, and as a
counselor. They were unlicensed doctors of western history. These women were
educated in the way of nursing, learning from hands on experience that was
passed down from mothers to daughters. Their herbal remedies are still used
today in modern pharmacology.
But what some may not
know is that these women were hunted. They were called witches and sadly most
burned at the stake.
Why were they
crucified on a burning cross when they helped so many? Most witches were lay
healers and therefore professed that some of their other remedies were purely
‘magical’ this in turn lead to their own demise.
In my research it is
said that the witch-hunts were conceived from two notions, one being that the
new male medical profession, under the protection and patronage of the ruling
classes. This new medical profession played a key role in the witch-hunts, and
maintaining that they were of medical reasoning.
.... Because the
Medieval Church, with the support of kings, princes and secular authorities,
controlled medical education and practice, the Inquisition [witch-hunts ]
constitutes, among other things, an early instance of the
"professional" repudiating the skills and interfering with the rights
of the "nonprofessional" to minister to the poor. (Thomas Szasz, The
Manufacture of Madness)
The second reason was
religion. The witches were generally not of faith and practiced based on the
knowledge they had acquired over the years as well as trial and error. The
Catholics along with the Protestants professed that these women were born of
devious nature and sexual conduct. They were spawns of the devil.
Their crimes became a
multitude of transgressions from political subversion to blasphemy. A list of
the three most prominent crimes mentioned periodically throughout history were
1. Every sexual crime against men. Infecting them during intercourse, lust in men was blamed upon the women, accused of making men impotent, of giving contraceptives, and performing abortions.
2. Being organized.
3. Having magical powers affecting health, harming but also of healing.
1. Every sexual crime against men. Infecting them during intercourse, lust in men was blamed upon the women, accused of making men impotent, of giving contraceptives, and performing abortions.
2. Being organized.
3. Having magical powers affecting health, harming but also of healing.
According to the church
all witches powers were derived from their sexuality, which was a sin.
Now there are, as it
is said in the Papal Bull, seven methods by which they infect with witchcraft
the venereal act and the conception of the womb: First, by inclining the minds
of men to inordinate passion; second, by obstructing their generative force;
third, by removing the members accommodated to that act; fourth, by changing
men into beasts by their magic act; fifth, by destroying the generative force
in women; sixth, by procuring abortion; seventh, by offering children to the
devils, besides other animals and fruits of the earth with which they work much
charm... (Malleus Maleficarum)
Witch-healers/midwives
were the only practitioners available to small villages and towns without
medical doctors or hospitals. However, according to witch-hunters Kramer and
Springer, “No one does more harm to the Catholic church than the mid-wife.” So
whether you are a witch or midwife you were doomed.
Witch-hunts lasted
for hundreds of years being the most prominent during the 14th- 17th
centuries. Witches represented a political, religious, and sexual threat toward
the church and government alike. Thousands and thousands of women were burned
at the stake in one account it states that there were two burnings a day for
certain German cities. In the Bishopric of Trier, in 1585, two villages were
left with only one female inhabitant each. Old women, young women and children
were hunted and killed. Anyone harboring a witch or failing to report one faced
excommunication and other punishments.
There are many
accounts of how these women were crazy, how they were a part of the peasant’s
rebellions of that time. But why wouldn’t they be? Their own government and
church were prosecuting them. Some may have been crazy, thought to possess
magical powers but it didn’t mean they deserved death punishable by horrid
torture of imaginable means. They were unjustly hung, burned, and drowned
because they were women taking from men a means of survival. They were a threat
to society because they were different.
Kat
2 comments:
Being different is still a threat to some. While some cultures venerated those with healing powers, ours killed or ostracized them. Thought provoking post, Kat.
You're exactly right, Caroline. So many women and children died because they were different. Most of them weren't even lay-healers/witches they were mothers and wives not practicing anything, but because they were female they were put to death.
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