Article
Details
Citation
Ring NA, McHugh NM, Reed BB, Davidson-Welch R & Dodd L (2024) Healers and midwives accused of witchcraft (1563–1736) - What secondary analysis of the Scottish survey of witchcraft can contribute to the teaching of nursing and midwifery history. Nurse Education Today, 133, Art. No.: 106026. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nedt.2023.106026
Abstract
Background
Nearly 4000 people were accused of witchcraft in Scotland between 1563 and 1736. Some of these were healers, midwives, and nurses.
Objective
To investigate Scotland's folk-healers and midwives accused of witchcraft and review their work from a nursing and midwifery perspective.
Design
Secondary analysis of the Survey of Scottish Witchcraft.
Methods
Those on the Survey with witchcraft accusations relating to folk-healing or midwifery were identified and their biographies were created from Survey data (2021). Individual biographical data were descriptively analysed. Healing/midwifery practice information was tabulated and thematically analysed.
Results
142 individuals were identified (85 % women), 51 % were found guilty, 90 % were executed. Most (98 %) were folk-healers with 10 accused for midwifery reasons. Mainly their work was accused of causing harm. Three themes emerged: their use of rituals; unorthodox religious practices and treatments. Rituals included actions carried out a certain number of times. Religious practices frequently referenced Catholicism. Many of their treatments for ingestion, application or bathing used items still recognised for their health properties. Approximately, 10 % of the 142, mainly in the 1500s/early 1600s, utilised expensive items and complex treatments which had more in common with ‘elite’ knowledge rather than simple folklore.
Conclusions
Across all 142 people, many aspects of their work are identifiable within more contemporary nursing and midwifery practice including their use of rituals, treatments, and holism. Mostly the accused were folk-practitioners, but a few (1500s/early 1600s) appear to have been healers working akin to physicians. Following the Protestant reformation (1560) their work, unlike that of physicians, was marginalised, considered unorthodox and harmful because they were women and/or their work reflected Catholicism. European hospital nursing originates in the monastic houses, but little is known about these early religious nurses. This study is novel in suggesting that whoever taught these accused witch/healers may have been connected to the monastic hospitals pre-Reformation.
Keywords
Nursing; Midwifery; History; Folk-healers; Witches; Rituals; Holistic care; Religious nurses
Journal
Nurse Education Today: Volume 133
Status | Published |
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Funders | Réseau de cancérologie Rossy |
Publication date | 29/02/2024 |
Publication date online | 07/11/2023 |
Date accepted by journal | 02/11/2023 |
URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1893/35834 |
Publisher | Elsevier BV |
ISSN | 0260-6917 |