The Devil's Dominion (Part 2) | Detecting the Devil's Servants From Familiar Spirits to Flying Ointments—The Science of Witch-Hunting
Description
In 1645, Matthew Hopkins declared himself the "Witch Finder General" and began a reign of terror that executed more people in two years than the previous century combined. His secret? Systematic methods for detecting familiar spirits—demonic creatures with names like Pyewacket, Vinegar Tom, and Grizel Greedigut.
This second part of our witch trials series moves from legal corruption to examine the supernatural evidence itself: the signs, spirits, and suffering that convinced communities they were surrounded by Satan's servants. Drawing from the 1847 London Journal's extensive investigation, discover how professional witch hunters transformed ordinary life into proof of diabolic conspiracy.
Explore the world of familiar spirits—physical demons that required feeding, shelter, and care while leaving evidence on human bodies through "witch marks" (supernatural nipples for nursing demons). Learn how Elizabeth Clarke confessed under torture to five distinct familiars: Holt the white cat (caused illness), Jamara the red spaniel (killed livestock), Vinegar Tom the greyhound (carried messages), Sack and Sugar the black rabbit (spied on enemies), and Newes the polecat (contaminated food supplies).
Discover the sophisticated torture techniques: the boots (iron devices that crushed leg bones), thumbscrews, systematic sleep deprivation combined with forced walking, pricking for insensitive marks using retractable needles, swimming tests (float = guilty, sink = innocent but drowned), and prayer tests designed to guarantee failure among the vulnerable. These weren't random cruelties but carefully designed procedures developed by educated professionals who understood exactly how to break human resistance.
Plus: flying ointments containing belladonna and mandrake, weather magic accusations against King James VI's voyage, shape-shifting evidence (injured cats = wounded women miles away), healing knowledge that became diabolic conspiracy, and the staggering scale: 157 people burned in Würzburg in just two years (1627-1629), including children as young as nine.
Features readings from London Journal (1847), Matthew Hopkins' documented cases, Scottish torture records, and European Inquisition accounts.
Part 2 of 2 - Companion to Part 1 on legal corruption and spectral evidence.














