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Take a small heart-shaped piece of leather, a handful of iron nails, eight brass pins, a lock of hair, some nail clippings, a pinch of navel fluff and place them in a bottle. Then add a pint of urine, seal the bottle and bury it by your front door — this is the recipe for warding off a witch’s curse.
An analysis of the contents of the first witch bottle to be found with its cork intact has cast light on the fear of witchcraft in the 17th century.
Originally posted by nrky
They should analyse the urine, they will see that there was a toxic chemical released into the american water supply during the witch-trials of salem, that caused madness and hysteria, by both the accused and accusees.
Originally posted by nrky
They should analyse the urine, they will see that there was a toxic chemical released into the american water supply during the witch-trials of salem, that caused madness and hysteria, by both the accused and accusees.
Originally posted by yellowcard
Originally posted by nrky
They should analyse the urine, they will see that there was a toxic chemical released into the american water supply during the witch-trials of salem, that caused madness and hysteria, by both the accused and accusees.
Proof of theory?
They should analyse the urine, they will see that there was a toxic chemical released into the american water supply during the witch-trials of salem, that caused madness and hysteria, by both the accused and accusees.
The bottle, which was found at a building site in Greenwich, southeast London
Originally posted by nrky
They should analyse the urine, they will see that there was a toxic chemical released into the american water supply during the witch-trials of salem, that caused madness and hysteria, by both the accused and accusees.
Her detective work, first published 25 years ago, brought Caporael instant fame, worldwide recognition — even a front-page story in the NEW YORK TIMES. That's quite a heavy load for a student. "When it first came out it was quite sensational," Caporael recalls. "I sort of thought that was my 15 minutes of fame and went on to do my more usual work." But the allure of the trials and Caporael's intriguing explanation — that the "bewitched" accusers of Salem had in fact suffered hallucinations, convulsions, bizarre skin sensations and other unusual symptoms because they'd been poisoned by a crop of fungus-infested rye — is still fascinating 25 years later. My Emphasis