DAME ALICE KYTELER, THE
SORCERESS OF KILKENNY
THE history of the
proceedings against Dame Alice Kyteler and her confederates on account of their
dealings in unhallowed arts is to be found in a MS. in the British Museum, and
has been edited amongst the publications of the Camden Society by Thomas
Wright, who considers it to be a contemporary narrative. Good modern accounts
of it are given in the same learned antiquary's "Narratives of Witchcraft
and Sorcery" in Transactions of the Ossory Archæological Society, vol. i.,
and in the Rev. Dr. Carrigan's History of the Diocese of Ossory, vol. i.

Dame Alice Kyteler
(such apparently being her maiden name), the facile princeps of Irish witches,
was a member of a good Anglo-Norman family that had been settled
in the city of Kilkenny
for many ears. The coffin-shaped tombstone of one of her ancestors, Jose de
Keteller, who died in 128-, is preserved at S. Mary's church; the inscription
is in Norman-French and the lettering is Lombardic. The lady in question must
have been far removed from the popular conception of a witch as an old woman of
striking ugliness, or else her powers of attraction were very remarkable, for
she had succeeded in leading four husbands to the altar. She had been married,
first, to William Outlawe of Kilkenny, banker; secondly, to Adam le Blund of
Callan; thirdly, to Richard de Valle--all of whom she was supposed to have got
rid of by poison; and fourthly, to Sir John le Poer, whom it was said she
deprived of his natural senses by philtres and incantations.
The Bishop of Ossory at
this period was Richard de Ledrede, a Franciscan friar, and an Englishman by
birth. He soon learnt that things were not as they should be, for when making a
visitation of his diocese early in 1324 he found by an Inquisition, in which
were five knights and numerous
nobles, that there was
in the city a band of heretical sorcerers, at the head of whom was Dame Alice.
The following charges were laid against them.
1. They had denied the
faith of Christ absolutely for a year or a month, according as the object they
desired to gain through sorcery was of greater or less importance. During all
that period they believed in none of the doctrines of the Church; they did not
adore the Body of Christ, nor enter a sacred building to hear mass, nor make
use of consecrated bread or holy water.
2. They offered in
sacrifice to demons living animals, which they dismembered, and then
distributed at cross-roads to a certain evil spirit of low rank, named the Son
of Art.
3. They sought by their
sorcery advice and responses from demons.
4. In their nightly
meetings they blasphemously imitated the power of the Church by fulminating
sentence of excommunication, with lighted candles, even against their own
husbands, from the sole of their foot to the crown of their head, naming each
part expressly, and then concluded by extinguishing
the candles and by
crying Fi! Fi! Fi! Amen.
5. In order to arouse
feelings of love or hatred, or to inflict death or disease on the bodies of the
faithful, they made use of powders, unguents, ointments, and candles of fat,
which were compounded as follows. They took the entrails of cocks sacrificed to
demons, certain horrible worms, various unspecified herbs, dead men's nails,
the hair, brains, and shreds of the cerements of boys who were buried unbaptized,
with other abominations, all of which they cooked, with various incantations,
over a fire of oak-logs in a vessel made out of the skull of a decapitated
thief.
6. The children of Dame
Alice's four husbands accused her before the Bishop of having killed their
fathers by sorcery, and of having brought on them such stolidity of their
senses that they bequeathed all their wealth to her and her favourite son,
William Outlawe, to the impoverishment of the other children. They also stated
that her present husband, Sir John le Poer, had been reduced to such a
condition by sorcery and the use of powders that he had
become terribly
emaciated, his nails had dropped off, and there was no hair left on his body.
No doubt he would have died had he not been warned by a maid-servant of what
was happening, in consequence of which be had forcibly possessed himself of his
wife's keys, and had opened some chests in which be found a sackful of horrible
and detestable things which he transmitted to the bishop by the hands of two
priests.
7. The said dame had a
certain demon, an incubus, named Son of Art, or Robin son of Art, who had
carnal knowledge of her, and from whom she admitted that she had received all
her wealth. This incubus made its appearance under various forms, sometimes as
a cat, or as a hairy black dog, or in the likeness of a negro (Æthiops),
accompanied by two others who were larger and taller than he, and of whom one
carried an iron rod.
According to another
source the sacrifice to the evil spirit is said to have consisted of nine red
cocks, and nine peacocks' eyes. Dame Alice was also accused of having
"swept the streets of Kilkenny betweene compleine and twilight, raking all
the filth
towards the doores of
hir sonne William Outlawe, murmuring secretly with hir selfe these words:
"To the house of
William my sonne
Hie all the wealth of
Kilkennie towne."
On ascertaining the
above the Bishop wrote to the Chancellor of Ireland, Roger Outlawe, who was
also Prior of the Preceptory of Kilmainham, for the arrest of these persons.
Upon this William Outlawe formed a strong party to oppose the Bishop's demands,
amongst which were the Chancellor, his near relative, and Sir Arnold le Poer,
the Seneschal of Kilkenny, who was probably akin to Dame Alice's fourth
husband. The Chancellor in reply wrote to the Bishop stating that a warrant for
arrest could not be obtained until a public process of excommunication had been
in force for forty days, while Sir Arnold also wrote requesting him to withdraw
the case, or else to ignore it. Finding such obstacles placed in his way the
Bishop took the matter into his own hands, and cited the Dame, who was then in
her son's house in Kilkenny, to appear before him. As might be expected,
she ignored the
citation, and fled immediately.
Foiled in this, he
cited her son William for heresy. Upon this Sir Arnold came with William to the
Priory of Kells, where De Ledrede was holding a visitation, and besought him
not to proceed further in the matter. Finding entreaty useless he had recourse
to threats, which he speedily put into execution. As the Bishop was going forth
on the following day to continue his visitation he was met on the confines of
the town of Kells by Stephen le Poer, bailiff of the cantred of Overk, and a
posse of armed men, by whom he was arrested under orders from Sir Arnold, and
lodged the same day in Kilkenny jail. This naturally caused tremendous
excitement in the city. The place became ipso facto subject to an interdict; the
Bishop desired the Sacrament, and it was brought to him in solemn procession by
the Dean and Chapter. All the clergy, both secular and religious, flocked from
every side to the prison to offer their consolation to the captive, and their
feelings were roused to the highest pitch by the preaching of a Dominican,
who took as his text,
Blessed are they which are persecuted, &c. Seeing this, William Outlawe
nervously informed Sir Arnold of it, who thereupon decided to keep the Bishop
in closer restraint, but subsequently changed his mind, and allowed him to have
companions with him day and night, and also granted free admission to all his
friends and servants.
After De Ledrede had
been detained in prison for seventeen days, and Sir Arnold having thereby
attained his end, viz. that the day on which William Outlawe was cited to
appear should in the meantime pass by, he sent by the hands of his uncle the
Bishop of Leighlin (Miler le Poer), and the sheriff of Kilkenny a mandate to
the constable of the prison to liberate the Bishop. The latter refused to sneak
out like a released felon, but assumed his pontificals, and, accompanied by all
the clergy and a throng of people, made his way solemnly to S. Canice's
Cathedral, where he gave thanks to God. With a pertinacity we cannot but admire
he again cited William Outlawe by public proclamation to appear before him, but
before the day arrived the Bishop
was himself cited to
answer in Dublin for having placed an interdict on his diocese. He excused
himself from attending on the plea that the road thither passed through the
lands of Sir Arnold, and that in consequence his life would be in danger.
De Ledrede had been
arrested by Le Poer's orders in Lent, in the year 1324. On Monday following the
octave of Easter the Seneschal held his court in Kilkenny, to which entrance
was denied the Bishop; but the latter, fully robed, and carrying the Sacrament
in a golden vase, made his way into the court-room, and "ascending the
tribunal, and reverently elevating the Body of Christ, sought from the
Seneschal, Justiciary, and Bailiffs that a hearing should be granted to
him." The scene between the two was extraordinary; it is too lengthy to
insert, and does not bear to be condensed--suffice it to say that the Seneschal
alluded to the Bishop as "that vile, rustic, interloping monk (trutannus),
with his dirt (hordys) which he is carrying in his hands," and refused to
hear his arguments, or to afford him any assistance.
Though we have lost
sight for a while
of Dame Alice, yet she
seems to have been eagerly watching the trend of events, for now we find her
having the Bishop summoned to Dublin to answer for having excommunicated her,
uncited, unadmonished, and unconvicted of the crime of sorcery. He attended
accordingly, and found the King's and the Archbishop's courts against him to a
man, but the upshot of the matter was that the Bishop won the day; Sir Arnold
was humbled, and sought his pardon for the wrongs he had done him. This was
granted, and in the presence of the council and the assembled prelates they
mutually gave each other the kiss of peace.
Affairs having come to
such a satisfactory conclusion the Bishop had leisure to turn his attention to
the business that had unavoidably been laid aside for some little time. He
directed letters patent, praying the Chancellor to seize the said Alice
Kyteler, and also directed the Vicar-General of the Archbishop of Dublin to
cite her to respond on a certain day in Kilkenny before the Bishop. But the
bird escaped again out of the hand of the fowler. Dame Alice fled a second
time, on this occasion
from Dublin, where she
had been living, and (it is said) made her way to England, where she spent the
remainder of her days unmolested. Several of her confederates were subsequently
arrested, some of them being apparently in a very humble condition of life, and
were committed to prison. Their names were: Robert of Bristol, a clerk, John
Galrussyn, Ellen Galrussyn, Syssok Galrussyn, William Payn de Boly, Petronilla
of Meath, her daughter Sarah, 1 Alice the wife of Henry Faber, Annota Lange,
and Eva de Brownestown. When the Bishop arrived in Kilkenny from Dublin he went
direct to the prison, and interviewed the unfortunates mentioned above. They
all immediately confessed to the charges laid against them, and even went to
the length of admitting other crimes of which no mention had been made; but,
according to them, Dame Alice was the mother and mistress of them all. Upon
this the Bishop wrote letters on the 6th of June to the Chancellor, and to the
Treasurer, Walter de Islep, requesting them to order the Sheriff to attach the
bodies of these people and put
them in safe keeping.
But a warrant was refused, owing to the fact that William Outlawe was a
relation of the one and a close friend of the other; so at length the Bishop
obtained it through the Justiciary, who also consented to deal with the case
when he came to Kilkenny.
Before his arrival the
Bishop summoned William Outlawe to answer in S. Mary's Church. The latter
appeared before him, accompanied by a band of men armed to the teeth; but in no
way overawed by this show of force, De Ledrede formally accused him of heresy,
of favouring, receiving, and defending heretics, as well as of usury, perjury,
adultery, clericide, and excommunications--in all thirty-four items were
brought forward against him, and he was permitted to respond on the arrival of
the Justiciary. When the latter reached Kilkenny, accompanied by the
Chancellor, the Treasurer, and the King's Council, the Bishop in their presence
recited the charges against Dame Alice, and with the common consent of the
lawyers present declared her to be a sorceress, magician, and heretic, and
demanded that she should be handed over
to the secular arm and
have her goods and chattels confiscated as well. judging from Friar Clyn's note
this took place on the 2nd of July. On the same day the Bishop caused a great
fire to be lit in the middle of the town in which he burnt the sackful of
magical stock-in-trade, consisting of powders, ointments, human nails, hair,
herbs, worms, and other abominations, which the reader will remember he had
received from Sir John le Poer at an early stage in the proceedings.
Further trouble arose
with William Outlawe, who was backed by the Chancellor and Treasurer, but the
Bishop finally succeeded in beating him, and compelled him to submit on his
bended knees. By way of penance he was ordered to hear at least three masses
every day for the space of a year, to feed a certain number of poor people, and
to cover with lead the chancel of S. Canice's Cathedral from the belfry
eastward, as well as the Chapel of the Blessed Virgin. He thankfully agreed to
do this, but subsequently refused to fulfil his obligations, and was thereupon
cast into prison.
What was the fate of
Dame Alice's accomplices, whose names we have given above, is not specifically
recorded, except in one particular instance. One of them, Petronilla of Meath,
was made the scapegoat for her mistress. The Bishop had her flogged six times,
and under the repeated application of this form of torture she made the
required confession of magical practices. She admitted the denial of her faith
and the sacrificing to Robert, son of Art, and as well that she had caused
certain women of her acquaintance to appear as if they had goats' horns, She
also confessed that at the suggestion of Dame Alice she had frequently consulted
demons and received responses from them, and that she had acted as a
"medium" (mediatrix) between her and the said Robert. She declared
that although she herself was mistress of the Black Art, yet she was as nothing
in comparison with the Dame from whom she had learnt all her knowledge, and
that there was no one in the world more skilful than she. She also stated that
William Outlawe deserved death as much as she, for he was privy to their
sorceries, and for a year and
a day had worn the
devil's girdle 1 round his body. When rifling Dame Alice's house there was
found "a wafer of sacramental bread, having the devil's name stamped
thereon instead of Jesus Christ, and a pipe of ointment wherewith she greased a
staffe, upon which she ambled and galloped through thicke and thin, when and in
what manner she listed." Petronilla was accordingly condemned to be burnt
alive, and the execution of this sentence took place with all due solemnity in
Kilkenny on 3rd November 1324, which according to Clyn fell on a Sunday. This
was the first instance of the punishment of death by fire being inflicted in
Ireland for heresy.
Whether or not
Petronilla's fellow-prisoners were punished is not clear, but the words of the
anonymous narrator show us that the burning of that unfortunate wretch was
rather the beginning than the end of persecution--that in fact numerous other
suspected persons were followed up, some of whom shared her terrible fate,
while to others milder
forms of punishment
were meted out, no doubt in proportion to their guilt. He says: "With
regard to the other heretics and sorcerers who belonged to the pestilential
society of Robin, son of Art, the order of law being pre, served, some of them
were publicly burnt to death; others, confessing their crimes in the presence
of all the people, in an upper garment, are marked back and front with a cross
after they had abjured their heresy, as is the custom; others were solemnly
whipped through the town and the market-place; others were banished from the city
and diocese; others who evaded the jurisdiction of the Church were
excommunicated; while others again fled in fear and were never heard of after.
And thus, by the authority of Holy Mother Church, and by the special grace of
God, that most foul brood was scattered and destroyed."
Sir Arnold le Poer, who
had taken such a prominent part in the affair, was next attacked. The Bishop
accused him of heresy, had him excommunicated, and committed prisoner to Dublin
Castle. His innocency was believed in by most people,
and Roger Outlawe,
Prior of Kilmainham, who also figures in our story, and who was appointed
Justiciary of Ireland in 1328, showed him some kindness, and treated him with
humanity. This so enraged the Bishop that he actually accused the Justiciary of
heresy. A select committee of clerics vindicated the orthodoxy of the latter,
upon which he prepared a sumptuous banquet for his defenders. Le Poer died in
prison the same year, 1331, before the matter was finally settled, and as he
was under ban of excommunication his body lay unburied for a long period.
But ultimately the
tables were turned with a vengeance. De Ledrede was himself accused of heresy
by his Metropolitan, Alexander de Bicknor, upon which he appealed to the Holy
See, and set out in person for Avignon. He endured a long exile from his
diocese, suffered much hardship, and had his temporalities seized by the Crown
as well. In 1339 he recovered the royal favour, but ten years later further
accusations were brought to the king against him, in consequence of which the
temporalities were a second time taken up, and other
severe measures were
threatened. However, by 1356 the storm had blown over; he terminated a lengthy
and disturbed episcopate in 1360, and was buried in the chancel of S. Canice's on
the north side of the high altar. A recumbent effigy under an ogee-headed
canopy is supposed to mark the last resting-place of this turbulent prelate.
In the foregoing pages
we have only given the barest outline of the story, except that the portions relative
to the practice of sorcery have been fully dealt with as pertinent to the
purpose of this book, as well as on account of the importance of the case in
the annals of Irish witchcraft. The story of Dame Alice Kyteler and Bishop de
Ledrede occupies forty pages of the Camden Society's publications, while
additional illustrative matter can be obtained from external sources; indeed,
if all the scattered material were gathered together and carefully sifted it
would be sufficient to make a short but interesting biography of that prelate,
and would throw considerable light on the relations between Church and State in
Ireland in the fourteenth century. With regard to the tale it is difficult to
know
what view should be
taken of it. Possibly Dame Alice and her associates actually tried to practise
magical arts, and if so, considering the period at which it occurred, we
certainly cannot blame the Bishop for taking the steps he did. On the other
hand, to judge from the analogy of Continental witchcraft, it is to be feared
that De Ledrede was to some extent swayed by such baser motives as greed of
gain and desire for revenge. He also seems to have been tyrannical,
overbearing, and dictatorial; according to him the attitude adopted by the
Church should never be questioned by the State, but this view was not shared by
his opponents. Though our sympathies do not lie altogether with him, yet to
give him his due it must be said that he was as ready to be persecuted as to
persecute; he did not hesitate to face an opposition which consisted of some of
the highest in the land, nor did fear of attack or imprisonment (which he
actually suffered) avail to turn him aside from following the course he had
mapped out for himself.
It should be noticed
that the appointment of De Ledrede to the See of Ossory
almost synchronised
with the elevation of John XXII to the Papacy. The attitude of that Pope
towards magical arts was no uncertain one. He believed himself to be surrounded
by enemies who were ever making attempts on his life by modelling images of him
in wax, to be subsequently thrust through with pins and melted, no doubt; or by
sending him a devil enclosed in a ring, or in various other ways. Consequently
in several Bulls he anathematised sorcerers, denounced their ill-deeds, excited
the inquisitors against them, and so gave ecclesiastical authorisation to the
reality of the belief in magical forces. Indeed, the general expressions used
in the Bull Super illius specula might be applied to the actions of Dame Alice and
her party. He says of certain persons that "they sacrifice to demons and
adore them. making or causing to be made images, rings, &c., with which
they draw the evil spirits by their magical art, obtain responses from them,
and demand their help in performing their evil designs." 1
Heresy and sorcery were
now identified, and the punishment for the former was the
same as that for the
latter, viz. burning at the stake and confiscation of property. The attitude of
this Pontiff evidently found a sympathiser in Bishop de Ledrede, who deemed it
necessary to follow the example set by the Head of the Church, with what
results we have already shown: thus we find in Ireland a ripple of the wave
that swept over Europe at this period.
It is very probable, too,
that there were many underlying local causes of which we can know little or
nothing; the discontent and anger of the disinherited children at the loss of
the wealth of which Dame Alice had bereft them by her exercise of "undue
influence" over her husbands, family quarrels, private hatreds, and
possibly national jealousy helped to bring about one of the strangest series of
events in the chequered history of Ireland.
Footnotes
35:1 Elsewhere given as
Basilia.
39:1 Magical girdles
were used for various purposes. Bosc in his Glossaire will have them to be the
origin of the magnetic belts, &c. that are so freely advertised at the
present day.
44:1 Français, op. cit.
No comments:
Post a Comment