Matthew Hopkins

Matthew Hopkins (c. 1620 – 12 August 1647) was an English witchhunter whose career flourished during the time of the English Civil War. He claimed to hold the office of Witchfinder General, although that title was never bestowed by Parliament. His witchhunts mainly took place in the eastern counties of Suffolk, Essex, Norfolk, and occasionally in Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire, Bedfordshire, and Huntingdonshire.[1]

Hopkins' witch-finding career began in March 1645[nb 1] and lasted until his retirement in 1647. During that period, he and his associates were responsible for more people being hanged for witchcraft than in the previous 100 years,[2][3] and were solely responsible for the increase in witch trials during those years.[4][5][6] He is believed to have been responsible for the deaths of 300 women between the years 1644 and 1646.[7] It has been estimated that all of the English witch trials between the early 15th and late 18th centuries resulted in fewer than 500 executions for witchcraft. Therefore, presuming the number executed as a result of investigations by Hopkins and his colleague John Stearne is at the lower end of the various estimates,[8][9][10] their efforts accounted for about 40 per cent of the total; in the 14 months of their crusade Hopkins and Stearne sent to the gallows more people than all the other witchhunters in the 160 years of persecution in England.[11]

Contents

Early life

Very little is known of Matthew Hopkins before 1644, and there are no surviving contemporary documents concerning him or his family.[12] He was born in Great Wenham, Suffolk.[13][14][15] He was the fourth son,[13] and one of six children.[16] His father, James Hopkins, was a Puritan clergyman and vicar of St John's of Great Wenham, in Suffolk.[15][17] The family were at one point landowners "to lands and tenements in Framlingham 'at the castle'".[18][19] His father was popular with his parishioners, one of whom in 1619 left money to purchase Bibles for his then three children James, John and Thomas.[14] Thus Hopkins could not have been born before 1619, and could not have been older than 28 when he died, but he may have been as young as 25.[20] Although James Hopkins had died in 1634,[14] when William Dowsing, commissioned in 1643 by the Parliamentarians in Manchester[21] "for the destruction of monuments of idolatry and superstition", visited the parish in 1645 he noted that "there was nothing to reform".[22] Hopkins' brother John became Minister of South Fambridge in 1645 but was removed from the post one year later for neglecting his work.[23]

Hopkins states in his book The Discovery of Witches[24] that he "never travelled far ... to gain his experience".[25] In the early 1640s Hopkins moved to Manningtree, Essex, a town across the River Stour from Colchester, about 9 miles (14 km) from Wenham. According to tradition Hopkins used his recently acquired inheritance of a hundred marks[26] to establish himself as a gentleman and buy the Thorn Inn in Mistley.[27] From the way that he presented evidence in trials, Hopkins is commonly thought to have been trained as a lawyer, but there is scant evidence to suggest this was the case.

Witch hunting

Following the Lancaster Witch Trial of 1634, William Harvey, physician to King Charles I of England, had been ordered to examine the four women accused,[28] and from this there came a requirement to have material proof of being a witch.[29] The work of Hopkins and Stearne was not necessarily to prove any of the accused had committed acts of maleficium but the fact they had made a covenant with the Devil.[30] Prior to this point, any malicious acts on the part of witches were treated identically to those of other criminals, until it was seen that they owed their powers to a deliberate act of their choosing.[31] Witches then became heretics to Christianity, which became the greatest of their crimes and sins.[32] Within continental and Roman Law witchcraft was crimen excepta: a crime so foul that all normal legal procedures were superseded. Because the Devil was not going to "confess", it was necessary to gain a confession from the human involved.[33]

The witch hunts undertaken by Stearne and Hopkins extended throughout the area of strongest Puritan and Parliamentarian influences which formed the powerful and influential Eastern Association from 1644 to 1647, centred on Essex.[34][35] Both Hopkins and Stearne would have required some form of letters of safe conduct[36][37] to be able to travel throughout the counties.[38] According to his book The Discovery of Witches,[24] Hopkins began his career as a witch-finder after he overheard various women discussing their meetings with the Devil in March 1644 in Manningtree. In fact, the first accusations were made by John Stearne and Hopkins was appointed as his assistant. Twenty-three women were accused of witchcraft, tried at Chelmsford in 1645. With the English Civil War under way, this trial was conducted not by justices of assize, but by Justice of the peace presided over by the Earl of Warwick.[39] Four died in prison and nineteen were convicted and hanged. During this period, excepting Middlesex and chartered towns, no records show any person charged of witchcraft being sentenced to death other than by the judges of the assizes.[40] Hopkins and Stearne, accompanied by the women who performed the pricking, were soon travelling over eastern England, claiming to be officially commissioned by Parliament to uncover and prosecute witches. Together with their female assistants, they were well paid for their work, and it has been suggested that this was a motivation for his actions.[41] Hopkins states [24] that "his fees were to maintain his company with three horses",[42][43] and that he took "twenty shillings a town".[43] The records at Stowmarket show their costs to the town to have been £23 (£6,700 as of 2012) plus his travelling expenses.[44] The expenses to the local community of Hopkins' and his company costs were such that in Ipswich a special local tax rate had to be levied in 1645.[45] Parliament was well aware of Hopkins and his team's activities, as shown by the concerned reports of the Bury St Edmunds witch trials of 1645. Before the trial, a report was carried to the Parliament – "as if some busie men had made use of some ill Arts to extort such confession"[46] – that a special Commission of Oyer and Terminer was granted for the trial of these witches.[46] After the trial and execution the Moderate Intelligencer, a parliamentary paper published during the English Civil War, in an editorial of 4–11 September 1645 expressed unease with the affairs in Bury.

Methods of investigation

Although torture was unlawful in England, Hopkins often used techniques such as sleep deprivation to extract confessions from his victims.[47] He would also cut the arm of the accused with a blunt knife, and if she did not bleed, she was said to be a witch. Another of his methods was the swimming test, based on the idea that as witches had renounced their baptism, water would reject them. Suspects were tied to a chair and thrown into water: all those who floated were considered to be witches. Hopkins was warned against the use of "swimming" without receiving the victim's permission first.[48] This led to the "legal" abandonment of the test by the end of 1645.[48] Hopkins and his assistants also looked for the Devil's mark. This was a mark that all witches or sorcerers were supposed to possess that was said to be dead to all feeling and would not bleed – although in reality it was usually a mole, birthmark or an extra nipple or breast.[49] If the suspected witch had no such visible marks, invisible ones could be discovered by pricking, therefore employed "witch prickers" pricked the accused with knives and special needles, looking for such marks, normally after the suspect had been shaved of all body hair.[50][51] It was believed that the witch's familiar, an animal such as a cat or dog, would drink the witch's blood from the mark, as a baby drinks milk from the nipple.

Opposition

Hopkins and his company ran into opposition very soon after the start of their work,[39] but one of his main antagonists was a Reverend John Gaule, vicar of Great Staughton.[52][53] Gaule had attended a woman from St Neots who was held in jail charged with witchcraft until such time that Hopkins could attend. Upon hearing that the woman had been interviewed, Hopkins wrote a letter[52][54] to a contact asking whether he would be given a "good welcome". Gaule hearing of this letter wrote his publication Select Cases of Conscience touching Witches and Witchcrafts; London, (1646) – dedicated to Colonel Walton of the House of Commons[52] – and began a programme of Sunday sermons to suppress witchhunting.[55] In Norfolk both Hopkins and Stearne were questioned by justices of the assizes, about the torturing and fees.[56] Hopkins was asked if methods of investigation did not make the finders themselves witches, and if with all his knowledge did he not also have a secret,[43][57] or had used "unlawful courses of torture".[57] By the time this court session resumed in 1647 Stearne and Hopkins had retired, Hopkins to Manningtree and Stearne to Bury St Edmunds.[43][57][58]

Colonial impact

Hopkins' witch hunting methods were outlined in his book The Discovery of Witches, which was published in 1647. These practices were recommended in law books.[59] During the year following the publication of Hopkins' book, trials and executions for witchcraft began in the New England colonies with the conviction of Margaret Jones. As described in the journal of Governor John Winthrop, the evidence assembled against Margaret Jones was gathered by the use of Hopkins' techniques of "searching" and "watching".[59] Jones' execution was the first in a witch-hunt that lasted in New England from 1648 until 1663.[60] About eighty people throughout New England were accused of practising witchcraft during that period, of whom 15 women and 2 men were executed.[60] Some of Hopkins' methods were once again employed during the Salem Witch Trials,[61] which occurred primarily in Salem, Massachusetts in 1692–93. These trials resulted in 19 executions for witchcraft,[62][63] one man, Giles Corey, pressed to death for refusing to plead,[64] and 150 imprisonments.

Death and legacy

Matthew Hopkins died at his home in Manningtree, Essex, on 12 August 1647, probably of pleural tuberculosis. He was buried a few hours after his death in the graveyard of the Church of St Mary at Mistley Heath.[65] In the words of historian Malcolm Gaskill, Matthew Hopkins "lives on as an anti-hero and bogeyman – utterly ethereal, endlessly malleable".[66] According to fellow historian Rossell Hope Robbins, Hopkins "acquired an evil reputation which in later days made his name synonymous with fingerman or informer paid by authorities to commit perjury".[67]

What historian James Sharpe has characterised as a "pleasing legend" grew up around the circumstances of Hopkins' death, according to which he was subjected to his own swimming test and executed as a witch, but the parish registry at Mistley confirms his burial there.[15]

References

Notes
  1. ^ At this time the New Year did not occur until 25 March; all Old Style Dates have been rendered as New Style, with the year beginning on 1 January
Footnotes
  1. ^ Robbins 1959: p. 251"
  2. ^ Russell 1981: pp. 97–98
  3. ^ Thomas 1971: p. 537, ... in Essex there were no executions after 1626 until 1645.
  4. ^ Deacon 1976: p. 41
  5. ^ Notestein 1911: p. 164
  6. ^ Thomas 1971: p. 528
  7. ^ Sharpe 2002, p. 3
  8. ^ Notestein 1911: p. 194, quoting Stearne who "boasted that he knew of 200"
  9. ^ Notestein 1911: p. 195, quoting James Howell "Familiar Letters, II 551, dates February 3, 1646/7 of "near 300"
  10. ^ Thomas 1971: pp. 544, 537,"...when the campaign of Matthew Hopkins and his associates resulted in the execution of several hundred witches..."
  11. ^ Notestein 1911: p. 195
  12. ^ Cabell 2006: p. 9; it is the author's opinion that "unfortunately one cannot dispute that all Hopkins documentation was deliberately destroyed after his death".
  13. ^ a b Gaskill 2005: p. 9
  14. ^ a b c Deacon 1976: p. 13
  15. ^ a b c Sharpe, James (2004), "Hopkins, Matthew (d. 1647)" (Subscription or UK public library membership required), Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.), Oxford University Press, http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/13751, retrieved 18 October 2009 
  16. ^ Deacon 1976: pp. 15–17
  17. ^ Deacon 1976: pp. 13, 17
  18. ^ Gaskill 2005: p. 23; Deacon 1976: p. 17; quoting James Hopkins' last will and testament
  19. ^ Knowles, George. "Matthew Hopkins – Witch–finder General". http://www.witchtrials.co.uk/matthew.html. Retrieved 2009-10-02. 
  20. ^ Cabell 2006: p. 6
  21. ^ Cabell 2006: p. 19
  22. ^ Gaskill 2005: p. 13
  23. ^ Deacon 1976: p. 14
  24. ^ a b c The Discovery of Witches – In Answer to Several Queries, Lately Delivered to the Judges of Assize for the County of Norfolk; London; 1674
  25. ^ Cabell 2006: p. 15
  26. ^ Gaskill 2005: p. 23
  27. ^ Gaskill 2005: p. 27
  28. ^ Your, Archives. "Witchcraft Trials". The National Archives. http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Witchcraft_Trials. Retrieved 8 March 2011. "SP 16/269 – SP16/271" 
  29. ^ Gaskill 2005: pp. 46–47
  30. ^ Thomas 1971: p 543; Gaskill 2005: p 47
  31. ^ Thomas 1971: pp. 521, 542–543
  32. ^ Thomas 1971: pp. 542–543
  33. ^ Robbins 1959: p. 498
  34. ^ Deacon 1976: p. 39
  35. ^ Notestein 1911: p. 197
  36. ^ Gaskill 2005: p. 79
  37. ^ Cabell 2006: p. 46
  38. ^ Deacon 1976: pp. 70–71 Deacon proposing that Hopkins knew John Thurloe future spy master for Cromwell, who facilitated any travelling. See also .Cabell 2006: p33
  39. ^ a b Thomas 1971: p. 545
  40. ^ Notestein 1911: p. 201
  41. ^ Russell 1981: p98
  42. ^ Cabell 2006: p36
  43. ^ a b c d Notestein 1911: p. 193
  44. ^ Notestein 1911: p183 & p193; quoting A.G. Hollingsworth, History of Stowmarket (Ipswich 1844)
  45. ^ Thomas 1971: p544, quoting Ipswich and East Suffolk R.O. Quarterly Sessions Order Book, 1639 – 57, and Memorials of Old Suffolk, ed V.B.Redstone(1908).
  46. ^ a b Notestein 1911: p. 178
  47. ^ Notestein 1911: p. 167; three days and nights of "watching" brought Elizabeth Clarke to "confess many things";
  48. ^ a b Cabell 2006: p. 22
  49. ^ Robbins 1959: p. 552
  50. ^ Robbins 1959: p. 398
  51. ^ Robbins 1959: p. 469; ...justification for shaving applied especially, but not exclusively, in England"
  52. ^ a b c Notestein 1911: p. 187
  53. ^ Gaskill 2005: pp. 219–220
  54. ^ Gaskill 2005: p. 220
  55. ^ Gaskill 2005: p. 220
  56. ^ Robbins 1959: p. 252
  57. ^ a b c Gaskill 2005: p. 238
  58. ^ Robbins 1959: p. 253
  59. ^ a b Jewett, Clarence F. The memorial history of Boston: including Suffolk County, Massachusetts. 1630–1880. Ticknor and Company. 1881 Pgs. 133–137
  60. ^ a b Fraden, Judith Bloom, Dennis Brindell Fraden. The Salem Witch Trials. Marshall Cavendish. 2008. Pg. 15
  61. ^ Upham, Caroline (1895). Salem Witchcraft in Outline. E. Putnam. pp. 5. 
  62. ^ The Death Warrant of Bridget Bishop
  63. ^ Death Warrant for Sarah Good, Rebecca Nurse, Susannah Martin, Elizabeth How & Sarah Wilds,
  64. ^ Boyer p8.
  65. ^ Gaskill 2005, p. 263
  66. ^ Gaskill 2005: p. 283
  67. ^ Robbins 1959: p. 248
Bibliography
  • Boyer, Paul S.; Nissenbaum, Stephen, eds. (1972), Salem-Village Witchcraft: A Documentary Record of Local Conflict in Colonial New England, Northeastern University Press, ISBN 1-55553-165-2 
  • Cabell, Craig (2006), Witchfinder General: The Biography of Matthew Hopkins, Sutton Publishing, ISBN 075094269 
  • Deacon, Richard (1976), Matthew Hopkins: Witch Finder General, Frederick Muller, ISBN 0584101643 
  • Gaskill, Malcolm (2005), Witchfinders: A Seventeenth-Century English Tragedy, John Murray, ISBN 0719561205 
  • Geis, Gilbert; Bunn Ivan (1997), A Trial of Witches A Seventeenth–century Witchcraft Prosecution, Routledge, ISBN 0415171091 
  • Notestein, Wallace (1911), A History of Witchcraft In England from 1558 to 1718, American Historical Association 1911 (reissued 1965) New York Russell & Russell, ISBN 8240954829816 
  • Robbins, Rossell Hope (1959), The Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology, Peter Nevill, ISBN 0517362457 (for modern publication) 
  • Russell, Jeffrey B (1981), A History of Witchcraft, Thames & Hudson, ISBN 0500286340 
  • Seth, Robert (1969), Children Against Witches, Robert Hale Co., ISBN 709106033 
  • Sharpe, James (2002), "The Lancaster witches in historical context", in Poole, Robert, The Lancashire Witches: Histories and Stories, Manchester University Press, pp. 1–18, ISBN 978-0719062049 
  • Thomas, Keith (1971), Religion and the Decline of Magic – Studies in Popular Beliefs in Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century England, Penguin Books, ISBN 0140137440 

Further reading

External links