The Witch-cult in Western Europe: A Study in Anthropology. Margaret Alice Murray
[29] Cannaert, p. 45.
[30] Spalding Club Miscellany, i, pp. 171, 172.
[31] De Lancre, Tableau, pp. 398, 399.
[32] Id., L'Incredulité, p. 801.
[33] Baines, i, p. 607 note. For the name Mamillion see Layamon's Brut, p. 155, Everyman Library.
[34] Bourignon, Vie, p. 222.—Hale, p. 37.
[35] Pitcairn, iii, pp. 605, 607, 613.
[36] Hale, p. 58.
[37] Surtees Soc., xl, pp. 191, 193.
[38] Fountainhall, i. 15.
[39] Howell, vi, 660.—J. Hutchinson, ii, p. 31.
[40] Alse Gooderidge, pp. 9, 10.
[41] Boguet, p. 54.
[42] Wonderfull Discouerie of Elizabeth Sawyer, C 4, rev.
[43] County Folklore, iii, Orkney, pp. 103, 107–8.
[44] Stearne, pp. 28, 38
[45] Highland Papers, iii, pp. 16, 17.
[46] It is possible that the shoe was cleft like the modern 'hygienic' shoe. Such a shoe is described in the ballad of the Cobler of Canterbury, date 1608, as part of a woman's costume:
'Her sleevës blue, her traine behind,
With silver hookes was tucked, I find;
Her shoës broad, and forked before.'
[47] Danaeus, ch. iv.
[48] De Lancre, Tableau, p. 69.
[49] Cooper, Pleasant Treatise, p. 2.
[50] Burns Begg, p. 217.
[51] Examination of John Walsh.
[52] Potts, D 3, B 2.
[53] Baines, i, p. 607 note.
[54] Hale, p. 46.
[55] Howell, iv, 833, 836, 840, 854–5.
[56] Stearne, p. 13.—Davenport, p. 13.
[57] Stearne, pp. 22, 29, 30.
[58] Glanvil, pt. ii, pp. 136, 137, 147, 149, 156, 161–5.
[59] Hale, p. 58.
[60] Petto, p. 18.
[61] Denham Tracts, ii, p. 301.
[62] Howell, viii, 1035.
[63] Elinor Shaw and Mary Phillips, p. 6.
[64] Pitcairn, i, pt. ii, pp. 51–6.
[65] Id., i, pt. ii, p. 162.
[66] Id., i, pt. ii, pp. 245–6, 239. Spelling modernized.
[67] Melville, pp. 395–6.
[68] Pitcairn, i, pt. ii, p. 210.
[69] Spalding Club Miscellany, i, pp. 124, 127, 164, 172.
[70] Pitcairn, ii, p. 537.
[71] County Folklore, iii, p. 103. Orkney.
[72] From the record of the trial in the Justiciary Court, Edinburgh.
[73] Spottiswode Miscellany, ii, p. 65.
[74] Pitcairn, iii, p. 599.
[75] Sinclair, p. 122.
[76] Id., p. 47.
[77] Arnot, p. 358.
[78] Scottish Antiquary, ix, pp. 50, 51.
[79] Kinloch,