Mathew Hopkins, Witchfinder General profile picture

Mathew Hopkins, Witchfinder General

About Me

Matthew Hopkins, d. 1647, was an English witchhunter whose career flourished in the time of the English Civil War. He held, or claimed to hold, the office of "Witch-finder Generall" as bestowed by the Puritan Parliament, and practised his witch-finding in the counties of Suffolk and Essex, in East Anglia.Hopkins was a lawyer and the son of James Hopkins; a Puritan clergyman. According to his book The Discovery of Witches (not to be confused with Reginald Scot's book The Discovery of Witchcraft) he began his career as a witch-finder when he overheard various women discussing their meetings with the Devil in March of 1644, in a village near Colchester. As a result of Hopkins's accusations, nineteen alleged witches were hanged and four more died in prison.Hopkins was soon travelling over eastern England, claiming truthfully or not to be an official specially commissioned by Parliament to uncover and prosecute witches. His witch-finding career spanned from 1644 to 1646. While torture was technically unlawful in England, he used various methods of browbeating to extract confessions from some of his victims. He used sleep deprivation as a sort of bloodless torture. He also used a "swimming" test to see if the accused would float or sink in water, the theory being that witches had renounced their baptism, so that all water would supernaturally reject them. He also employed "witch prickers" who pricked the accused with knives and special needles, looking for the Devil's mark that was supposed to be dead to all feeling and would not bleed. It was believed that the witch's familiar would drink their blood from the mark as milk from a teat.On the strength of his commission, Hopkins then demanded that the communities he visited pay him for his work. He also sold fetishes he called "witch boxes" that were supposed to protect the households of their owners from sorcery.The parish records of Manningtree in Essex record his burial in August of 1647.
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My Interests

I'd like to meet:

Those accused of witchcraft.

My Blog

MY BOOK: THE DISCOVERY OF WITCHES

TheDiscovery of Witches: InAnswer to severall QUERIES,LATELY Delivered to the Judges of Assize for theCounty of NORFOLK.And now publishedBy MATTHEW HOPKINS, Witch-finder,FORThe Benefit of the whole KI...
Posted by on Wed, 18 Oct 2006 08:31:00 GMT