Agnes Murray

she/her · Haddington

Agnes Murray

In the year 1649, Agnes Murray, a resident of the burgh of Haddington, became the subject of formal legal proceedings during a period of intense judicial scrutiny regarding witchcraft in Scotland. Recorded under the archival reference C/EGD/1346, Agnes was brought before the authorities to answer for allegations that had brought her under the gaze of the kirk session and the civil magistrates. Her case emerged during a tumultuous era when local communities were increasingly focused on identifying those suspected of harmful occult activities, leading to her designation as a focal point for the legal apparatus of the time.

Following the initial entry into the Haddington records, Agnes was brought to face the tribunal documented in file T/LA/1035. The movement from a localized accusation to a formal trial reflected the established administrative process of seventeenth-century Scottish justice, where the gravity of such charges necessitated a structured examination of the evidence. As Agnes appeared before the court, her case became a small but indelible part of the broader history of the 1649 trials, marking a significant intersection between the life of a Haddington woman and the rigorous legal and religious frameworks of the mid-seventeenth century.

This narrative was generated by AI based solely on the historical records in the database.

Timeline of Events
1649 — Case opened
Murray,Agnes
— — Trial
Key Facts
SexFemale
CountyHaddington
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