Soulmother of Küssnacht
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The Soulmother of Kûssnacht, (d.1577), was an alleged Swiss witch and medium in the city of Küssnacht in the canton of Luzern in Switzerland.
In 1573 the priests of Luzern sent a formal complaint to the bishop of Konstanz about the great superstitions and beliefs in wise women, the occult and such. They pointed out one of these occultists, the very center of all superstition they disliked: a woman called "the mother of souls" in Küssnacht.
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[edit] Activity as a medium
This woman had for a period of thirteen years, since 1560, had a lucrative business as a medium; it is said, that when someone died, the mourners ran to the soulmother, who had visions and could speak to the dead and tell the mourners how to set the dead to rest. Through the spirits with whom she spoked, she received news from the other world about what the customers asked her about and then recommended what they should do. When the customers arrived, she could tell them what they wanted before they had the time to state their business, and then she consulted the spirits during the following nights, while the clients stayed the night at the boarding-house of her companion, Verena Lifibach.
When she summoned a spirit, she measured the windows and the doors with thread, holy water and palms were placed out, if it was Saturday, a circle was drawn out, and then with fifteen words "out of the sacrifice of Jesus Christ", the spirit was summoned. According to her assistant Riss, the good spirits were white, the evil ones yellow.
The Soulmother received visitors every day and had a very lucrative business.
[edit] Witch trial
The bishop of Konstanz contacted the governments of Luzern and Schwyz, who first thought the accusations were slander, but after having questioned her, they dealt swiftly with her; she was tortured to confess to witchcraft, and although she tried to claim she was not as dangerous as "Die Sagerin", Eva Roller, she was burned alive at the stake in November 1577.
Verena Liefbach was banished, and assistant Riss, who seems to have been released, was arrested again a couple of years later accused of claiming to be able to tell the cause of a miscarriage or stillbirth by burning the hair of the dead infant in the light of a candle; if it was human, the hair turned blue when it burned, if it was a spirit, the hair turned black.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Eva Kärfve, "Den Stora ondskan i Valais" (literally The great evil in Valais), Swedish