In the spring of 1662, the rural parish of Fossoway and Tullibole, located within the Crook of Devon in Perthshire, became the setting for the legal proceedings against Agnes Murie. Recorded under case file C/EGD/1483, the documentation identifies Agnes as a female resident of this locale, situated at a time when the region saw a concentrated period of judicial activity regarding allegations of witchcraft. The formal entry, dated April 3, 1662, marks the specific point at which Agnes was brought under the scrutiny of the local authorities.
While the surviving records for Agnes are brief, they are indicative of the broader institutional mechanisms employed during this era to investigate such charges. Her case remains a documented entry within the administrative history of the 1662 trials, reflecting the transition of these proceedings through the local legal structures of the seventeenth-century Scottish kirk and civil courts. Though the precise nature of the accusations brought against Agnes is not detailed in the available materials, the record serves as a testament to her presence within the rigorous historical landscape of the Scottish witch trials.