Vol. 2 (2013): Shakespeare and Early Modern Popular Culture
Part Two - Case Studies

Lancashire: a Land of Witches in Shakespeare’s Time

Published 2013-03-27

Keywords

  • Authorial Intervention; Lancashire Witches

How to Cite

Baratta, L. (2013). Lancashire: a Land of Witches in Shakespeare’s Time. Journal of Early Modern Studies, 2, 185–208. https://doi.org/10.13128/JEMS-2279-7149-12635

Abstract

This article focuses on the connection between Shakespeare’s Macbeth and the famous English witch trial which took place in Lancashire in 1612. The judicial proceeding was recorded by a clerk of the court, who went by the name of Thomas Potts, whose reportage of the events was inconsistent and unstable, as I attempt to point out. In so doing, I underline the reasons – political, religious and opportunistic – that possibly motivated his behaviour, highly criticisable by modern standards.