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The Devil Is Real (Tyril I Lister of even if Tempest, Part 1)

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Manage episode 404507864 series 2433666
Content provided by Air & Madelyn. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Air & Madelyn or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

On today's TWO HOUR EVALUDATE SPECIAL, we're getting into the real-world history of witch hunting and witch trials around Europe and North America, Madelyn insists that everyone else insisting that she would like Tyril is still wrong, and being a murder suspect is boring now--it's time to get deputized.
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Content Warnings:

  • Discussion of antisemitism and islamophobia: 13:23 - 14:45, 54:28 - 54:55
  • Sexual Assault: 25:17 - 25:59
  • Emetophobia: 1:06:08 - 1:07:31
  • CSA: 1:16:50 - 1:17:20
  • Suicide: 1:16:50 - 1:17:20
  • Incest: 1:30:43 - 1:31:05, 1:34:04 - 1:34:16

Corrections, Notes, and Sources:

Air misspoke when saying Pope John XXII’s declaration of witchcraft as heresy in 1320 took the form of a papal bull. Though the pope eventually described witchcraft and announced that anyone who engaged with it would be excommunicated in his 1336 papal bull Super illius specula, his initial 1320 judgment was outlined in Cardinal William of Santa Sabina’s “Letter of 22 August 1320, to Inquisitors of Carcassone and Toulouse”

In the episode, Air stated that Matthew Hopkins charged around £20 per town, in reference to how much he was reported to have charged the town of Stowmarket in A.G. Hollingsworth’s History of Stowmarket (1844). According to the records, he charged £23 plus traveling expenses. Hopkins himself, however, stated that he only took “twenty shillings a town” (A History of Witchcraft In England from 1558 to 1718)

Sources can be found on the tumblr blog, here.

  continue reading

103 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 404507864 series 2433666
Content provided by Air & Madelyn. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Air & Madelyn or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

On today's TWO HOUR EVALUDATE SPECIAL, we're getting into the real-world history of witch hunting and witch trials around Europe and North America, Madelyn insists that everyone else insisting that she would like Tyril is still wrong, and being a murder suspect is boring now--it's time to get deputized.
Follow Us:
Twitter
Tumblr

Content Warnings:

  • Discussion of antisemitism and islamophobia: 13:23 - 14:45, 54:28 - 54:55
  • Sexual Assault: 25:17 - 25:59
  • Emetophobia: 1:06:08 - 1:07:31
  • CSA: 1:16:50 - 1:17:20
  • Suicide: 1:16:50 - 1:17:20
  • Incest: 1:30:43 - 1:31:05, 1:34:04 - 1:34:16

Corrections, Notes, and Sources:

Air misspoke when saying Pope John XXII’s declaration of witchcraft as heresy in 1320 took the form of a papal bull. Though the pope eventually described witchcraft and announced that anyone who engaged with it would be excommunicated in his 1336 papal bull Super illius specula, his initial 1320 judgment was outlined in Cardinal William of Santa Sabina’s “Letter of 22 August 1320, to Inquisitors of Carcassone and Toulouse”

In the episode, Air stated that Matthew Hopkins charged around £20 per town, in reference to how much he was reported to have charged the town of Stowmarket in A.G. Hollingsworth’s History of Stowmarket (1844). According to the records, he charged £23 plus traveling expenses. Hopkins himself, however, stated that he only took “twenty shillings a town” (A History of Witchcraft In England from 1558 to 1718)

Sources can be found on the tumblr blog, here.

  continue reading

103 episodes

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