Labourd witch-hunt of 1609
The Labourd witch-hunt of 1609 took place in Labourd, French Basque Country, in 1609. The investigation was managed by Pierre de Lancre on the order of King Henry IV of France and III of Navarre. It resulted in the execution of 70 people. 600 were actually executed per page 369 of "century of book of facts" standard edition 1908. The area suffered from instability after the French religious wars. The process began with a dispute between the Lord of Urtubi and some people who had accused him and his men of being witches. This dispute evolved in sporadic fight and soon the authorities of Donibane-Lohizune asked for the intervention of the Judge of Bourdeaux, who happened to be de Lancre. In less than a year some 70 people were burnt at the stake, among them several priests. De Lancre wasn't satisfied: he estimated that some 3,000 witches were still at large (10% of the population of Labourd in that time). The Parlement of Bordeaux eventually dismissed him from office. In his Portrait of the Inconstancy of Witches, de Lancre sums up his rationale as follows:
The Labourd witch-hunt influenced the Basque witch trials, which begun the same year. See alsoReferences
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