John Stearne (witch-hunter) explained

John Stearne (c. 1610–1670)[1] was an associate of self-styled "Witchfinder General" Matthew Hopkins, who was active during the English Civil War.[2] The duo's activities were heavily fictionalized in the 1968 horror film Witchfinder-General (U.S. title: The Conqueror Worm). Stearne was known at various times as the witch-hunter,[3] [4] and "witch pricker".[5]

Raised in Long Melford, Suffolk,[6] Stearne later became a land owner at Lawshall near Bury St Edmunds.[7] He met Hopkins, who was 10 years' his junior, in Manningtree and appointed him as his assistant. As a result of Stearne's accusations, a trial was held in Chelmsford in July 1645 for 29 people accused of witchcraft and sorcery.[8] Of these, four had died in prison prior to the trial[8] and 15 or 16[9] were subsequently hanged. Nine who had been convicted of conjuring spirits were reprieved.[10]

Within a year of the death of Matthew Hopkins, John Stearne retired to his farm and wrote A Confirmation and Discovery of Witchcraft.

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Notes and References

  1. Book: The Discovery of Witches and Witchcraft: The Writings of the Witchfinders. S.F. Davies. Puckrel. 2007. 9780955635014.
  2. A detailed account of the two men's activities can be found in Malcolm Gaskill's Witchfinders: A Seventeenth Century English Tragedy (Harvard, 2005).
  3. Web site: St Edmundsbury . Borough Council . Reformation and Civil War 1539-1699 . 15 December 2007 .
  4. [#Witchcraft|Notestein 1911]
  5. [#Witchcraft|Notestein 1911]
  6. Book: Witchfinders: A Seventeenth-Century English Tragedy. 9780674025424. Gaskill. Malcolm. October 2007. Harvard University Press .
  7. [#Witchfinders|Gaskill 2005]
  8. [#Witchfinders|Gaskill 2005]
  9. [#Witchcraft|Notestein 1911]
  10. [#Witchfinders|Gaskill 2005]