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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Isobel Elliot
Bornc. 1651
Died20 September 1678
Peaston
Cause of deathStrangled and Burnt
NationalityScottish
Known forAccused witch

Isobel Elliot (c. 1651 - d. 1678), sometimes called Isobell Eliot, was a woman accused of witchcraft from Peaston, near Ormiston in East Lothian. She was tried as a witch in Edinburgh during 1678, and executed on 20 September 1678 at Peaston by being strangled and burnt at the stake.[1]

At her time of death, Elliot was thought to have been around 27 years old.[1] She was the servant of Helen Laying, another accused witch, and of lower socioeconomic status. Not much is known about Elliot 's relationship or marital status.

Trial and confession

Elliot was accused of entering into a pact with the Devil after she lay, or had sex with, with the Devil and renounced her baptism. After she was baptised she was given a new name, 'Jean'.[1] She was accused of killing the daughter and grandson of two local women.[1] She allegedly had done this by flying in the form of a bee, carrying poison in her claws and wings, which identified her as a follower of rebel East Lothian minister, Gideon Penman.[2] Elliot confessed to the minister of Ormiston, John Sinclair, that many nights she and other witches had wanted to get inside his house and yard, but the Devil had told her that he could not be attacked.[3]

Image of the village of Peaston, a stone cottage and a sign saying 'peaston'.
Peaston village, near Ormiston in East Lothian.

Members of the local nobility and community requested permission to hold a local trial for Elliot in 1678, which was refused. However, it was eventually escalated to a central trial, in Edinburgh. There were three trials recorded for Elliot, taking place in June and September 1678 with a confession being obtained on the 13 September.[1] Elliot was probably tried with seven to nine other witches accused in and around East Lothian in 1678. Sir John Nicolson, John Clerk of Penicuik, John Johnston of Polton, and John Preston (relation to the Preston's of Craigmillar Castle) were commissioners in her trial.[4]

Death and legacy

Elliot was one of four witches, out of the nine other witches sentenced, who was taken to Peaston to be executed.[4] She was strangled and burnt to death on the 20 September 1678.

There has been speculation as to whether Isabel Heriot, a woman who was born in Ormiston in the same period and mythologised as a poltergeist in George Sinclair's Satan's Invisible World Discovered, was the same person as Elliot.[5] However, this is unlikely as Heriot was never recorded as being considered a witch by her contemporaries, unlike Elliot.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Goodare, Julian; Martin, Lauren; Miller, Joyce; Yeoman, Louise (January 2003). "Isobel Elliot". The Survey of Scottish Witchcraft. Retrieved 24 November 2023.
  2. ^ Goodare, Julian (2013). "Flying Witches in Scotland". In Goodare, Julian (ed.). Scottish Witches and Witch-Hunters. Palgrave Historical Studies in Witchcraft and Magic. London: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 164. ISBN 978-1-349-47033-4.
  3. ^ a b Sinclair, George (1685). Satan's Invisible World Discovered. Edinburgh: Printed by John Reid. p. 152.
  4. ^ a b "'Historical Notices of Scotish Affairs, selected from the Manuscripts of John Lauder of Fountainhall. 1' - Viewer | MDZ". www.digitale-sammlungen.de. pp. 197–200. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
  5. ^ Parsons, Coleman O. (1946). "Stevenson's Use of Witchcraft in "Thrawn Janet"". Studies in Philology. 43 (3): 566. ISSN 0039-3738.
This page was last edited on 3 February 2024, at 22:57
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