270
NAMES OF WITCHES
Rose Hallybread | St. Osyth | 1645 |
Sarah Barton | Harwich | 1645 |
Sarah Cooper | Essex | 1645 |
Sarah Hating | Ramsey, Essex | 1645 |
Sarah Smith | St. Albans | 1649 |
Susan Cock | St. Osyth | 1645 |
Susanna Edwards | Bideford | 1682 |
Susanne Prudhomme | Guernsey | 1629 |
Susanne Rouanne | Guernsey | 1631 |
Temperance Lloyd | Bideford | 1682 |
Thomas Bolster | Somerset | 1665 |
Thomas Burnhill | N. Berwick | 1590 |
Thomas Burning | Somerset | 1665 |
Thomas Leyis | Aberdeen | 1597 |
Thomas Weir | Edinburgh | 1670 |
Thomasse de Calais | Guernsey | 1617 |
Thomazine Ratcliffe | Suffolk | 1645 |
Thomasse Salmon | Guernsey | 1570 |
Thomasine Watson | Northumberland | 1673 |
Ursley Kemp | St. Osyth | 1582 |
Vyolett Leyis | Aberdeen | 1597 |
Walter Ledy | Auldearne | 1662 |
William Ayres | Conn. | 1662 |
William Barton | Queensferry | 1655 |
William Berry | Rutland | 1619 |
William Coke | Kirkcaldy | 1636 |
William Craw | Borrowstowness | 1679 |
William Wright | Northumberland | 1673 |
APPENDIX IV
JOAN OF ARC AND GILLES DE RAIS
These two personages—so closely connected in life and dying similar deaths, yet as the poles asunder in character—have been minutely studied from the historical and medical points of view, and in the case of Joan from the religious standpoint also. But hitherto the anthropological aspect has been disregarded. This is largely due to the fact that these intensive studies have been made of each person