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Treatment for breast cancer (?) c. 1654
Norfolk school master Mr Hall was consulted as a cunning man in August 1654 by the sister of a Hillington labourer for a problem with her sister in law’s heart/breast. He advised him that there were at least three witches living in Hillington, one of whom lived under the labourer’s nose and that she would not mend until they had taken off her familiars. Mr Hall visited the next day and gave the patient a powder and this writing (a curious mix of Latin & English invocations and symbols) to wear.
Norfolk Quarter Sessions, 1654
Wise Men
My friend Graeme Chappell sent me this photo that he took many years ago in the York Castle museum. The photo is of a Cunning or Wiseman’s rattle below is another example from the Whitby Museum can be seen here
The rattles are constructed of pine spills and decorated with charms and mottoes. Rattles are often used by shamanic healers. The rattle is often thought to represent the cosmos, the…
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Weakness: Cunning guys.
'CUNNING MEN, WOMEN'
From the medieval period almost to the present day, there have been people who were employed by others to practise magical skills on their behalf, and were paid in money or small gifts, thus usefully supplementing the income from their regular occupations. Frequent complaints by the educated classes indicate how popular they were. In a sermon in 1552, Bishop Latimer lamented: 'A great many of us, when we be in trouble, or lose anything, we run hither and thither to witches or sorcerers, whom we call wise men . . . seeking aid and comfort at their hands' (Sermons [1844], 534). In 1807, Robert Southey could still say: 'A Cunning-Man, or a Cunning-Woman, as they are termed, is to be found near every town, and though the laws are occasionally put in force against them, still it is a gainful trade' (Letters from England, p. 295).