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Last Updated: Thursday, 20 September 2007, 15:17 GMT 16:17 UK

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Europe's last witch-hunt

By Imogen Foulkes

BBC News, Switzerland

Fear and superstition fuelled witch-hunts all over Europe in the Middle Ages and caused the deaths of many innocent women. The last execution for witchcraft took place little more than 200 years ago but campaigners in Switzerland claim it may be time to clear Anna Goeldi's name.

To understand Anna Goeldi's story you need to go to where it unfolded, in the tiny Swiss canton of Glarus.

An Anna Goeldi museum is opening in Glarus in the autumn

It is a long narrow valley, the mountains loom above, the villages are squeezed below into the spaces where the grey rock unwillingly makes way for earth and grass.

You get the sense, even today, that many of the world's events have passed Glarus by.

This was where Anna Goeldi arrived in 1765, looking for work as a maid.

One of the houses she worked in still exists. It is imposing, smug almost, four storeys high, with a grand doorway, and the crests of the noble Glarus families who lived there painted on its walls.

It is the first clue to Anna Goeldi's fate.

Witchcraft

She found work with Jakob Tschudi, the magistrate and a rising political figure.

We know from records of the time that Anna Goeldi was tall, generously proportioned, with dark hair, brown eyes, and a rosy complexion. These attributes were not lost on her employer.

All went well to begin with, until one morning one of the Tschudi children found a needle in her milk.

Two days later needles appeared in the bread as well and suspicion fell upon Anna.

The house where Anna Goeldi was a maid

Despite her protestations of innocence, she was sacked by the Tschudis, accused of witchcraft, tortured, and finally executed.

Not in the Middle Ages, but in 1782, at the height of Europe's so-called Age of Enlightenment.

But today Walter Hauser, a local journalist, does not believe Anna died because isolated Glarus remained mired in medieval superstition.

Researching the original records of the case, he found something far more banal.

"Jakob Tschudi had an affair with Anna Goeldi," he explains.

"When she was sacked, she threatened to reveal that. Adultery was a crime then. He stood to lose everything if he was found out."

But at that time in Glarus, witchcraft was a crime.

Mr Hauser calls Anna's trial and execution "judicial murder".

"Educated people here did not believe in witchcraft in 1782," he insists.

"Anna Goeldi was a threat to powerful people. They wanted her out of the way, accusing her of being a witch. It was a legal way to kill her."

Anna Goeldi's ordeal remains, in meticulous detail, in the Glarus archives.

Confession under torture

This woman, who could neither read nor write, was questioned day and night by the religious and political leaders of Glarus.

She insisted on her innocence, so they tortured her, hanging her up by her thumbs and tying stones to her feet.

Anna Goeldi was executed in 1782

When she finally confessed, it was to all sorts of bizarre cliches.

The devil had appeared to her in the form of a black dog. The needles had been given to her by Satan.

But once free of the torture, she withdrew her confession.

They tortured her again so brutally that she confessed again, and stuck with her confession.

Two weeks later, she was led out to the public square, where her head was cut off with a sword.

Fritz Schiesser, who today represents Glarus in the Swiss parliament, believes it is time to officially acknowledge this as a miscarriage of justice.

"Everyone agrees that what happened was completely wrong," he tells me.

"We need to take this last step, and admit it."

I do not think people today should be held responsible for the past

Schoolgirl in Glarus

But in Glarus opinions are mixed.

At the local high school, many students are uncomfortable about reviving this old story.

"I agree it was shocking, but that was Glarus then," says one girl.

"It happened a long time ago," says another.

"I don't think people today should be held responsible for the past."

It is a familiar argument. Switzerland used it for years as justification for not apologising for the way it turned away Jewish refugees during World War II.

An official apology was finally made after great international pressure at the end of the 1990s, but the authorities in Glarus do not want to learn from that. It is a stain on our history. Now we could do something to erase that stain

Walter Hauser

They could exonerate Anna Goeldi today, but refuse to do so, calling it a cheap solution which would not help anyone.

Journalist Walter Hauser is disappointed.

"We were the last in Europe to execute a woman for witchcraft," he says

"It is a stain on our history. Now we could do something to erase that stain."

Fritz Schiesser has tabled a motion in parliament calling for Anna Goeldi's exoneration. This weekend a museum will open in Glarus dedicated to her.

It is ironic really. When Anna Goeldi was executed, the people of Glarus tried to hush it up, afraid of what the rest of the world would think. Two hundred and twenty five years later, her story has come back to haunt them.

From Our Own Correspondent was broadcast on Thursday 19 September, 2007 at 1100 BST on BBC Radio 4. Please check the programme schedules for World Service transmission times

--------------------------------------------------------------

MPs turn back time to pardon Swiss 'witch'

By Bojan Pancevski

Last Updated: 1:41AM BST 02/07/2007

The execution of the last European witch to be sentenced to death by a court of law has plunged Switzerland into an unlikely political debate over whether she should now be pardoned.

Anna Goeldi, a housemaid, was executed by decapitation after being found guilty of witchcraft in the small Alpine town of Glarus in 1782.

Now, 225 years later, a group of local and federal MPs has prepared a parliamentary motion demanding the full rehabilitation of Goeldi, who was tortured into confessing to being a witch and was subsequently beheaded. Campaigners claim she was the victim of a conspiracy between the eastern town's juridical and Protestant church authorities.

Goeldi was employed by the family of a rich married politician, who apparently first impregnated and then sacked her, claiming she made his daughter ill by witchcraft and denouncing her to the authorities.

The move, believed to be the first of its kind, follows other recent attempts to right historical wrongs, including a spate of apologies from countries involved in the slave trade. It comes after officials of the Glarus canton and the Swiss church admitted an error was committed 225 years ago - but refused to initiate legal procedure to clear Goeldi.

Posted

Yeah, this is pretty freakin' late...

Posted
Weirdness...
Posted

Worthless waste of time, just like reparations for slavery in the US.

Posted

Worthless waste of time, just like reparations for slavery in the US.

Enslaving witches... now that's an idea...

Posted

Enslaving witches... now that's an idea...

I call dibs on Sabrina.

stwsttb210r.jpg

drooooooooooooooooooooooooool

Posted

I call dibs on the whole charmed crew lol!

charmed_s8_1.jpg

and lets not forget samantha and her cousin

who were both played by Elizabeth Motgomery

sampinup.jpg

Posted

I call dibs on the whole charmed crew lol!

charmed_s8_1.jpg

and lets not forget samantha and her cousin

who were both played by Elizabeth Motgomery

sampinup.jpg

damnit! outsmarted!

wait, you're a witch... i call dibs on you, and hence get your dibs.

Posted

she looks hot in those stockings! I had no idea that photo was out there....very Betty Page! Whoo hoo!

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