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left-of-center2012

(34,195 posts)
Wed Jun 12, 2019, 01:32 PM Jun 2019

For Sale: 'Haunted' Medieval Prison That Held Accused Witches

A small building in England that was once a medieval prison for people accused of witchcraft is now a cozy home in need of an owner.

But prospective buyers should be forewarned: The sordid history of the former jail, known as "The Cage," has led many to claim that the house is haunted, with some calling it the most haunted house in England.

Located in St. Osyth in Essex, U.K., the building was recently placed on the market by owner Vanessa Mitchell; this is the third time that Mitchell has tried to sell The Cage since moving out in 2008, according to local news outlet The Clacton and Frinton Gazette.
Mitchell reportedly fled the house in 2004 and moved elsewhere after seeing "mysterious blood spatters" and being "physically attacked" by malevolent ghosts — one of which was "a satanic-looking goat," Mitchell told The Gazette.

During the St. Osyth witch trials in 1582, 14 women were accused of witchcraft-related crimes, for which three were executed, the East Anglian Times reported. During the trials, the women were housed in The Cage.

One of the accused, Ursula Kemp, was a local healer who was sentenced to death by hanging; she is commemorated in a plaque that hangs on one of the former prison's walls. Kemp was accused of casting spells that led to the death of a neighbor's newborn. She then accused others of practicing witchcraft, and they, in turn, accused even more unfortunate individuals, according to the Times. Essex was a hotbed of witchcraft trials during the 16th and 17th centuries — of the 112 witches who were executed in England in the 1640s alone, 82 were put to death in Essex, the Times reported.

In 1921, two female skeletons that were thought to be the remains of executed witches — one of them reportedly Kemp — were unearthed in a St. Osyth garden during a construction project. Some of the bones appeared to have been pierced with nails, a common practice for dead witches to keep their spirits from haunting the living, according to the Times.

The asking price for the allegedly haunted former prison is $305,478, according to Wales Online.

https://www.livescience.com/65694-medieval-witch-prison-house.html

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For Sale: 'Haunted' Medieval Prison That Held Accused Witches (Original Post) left-of-center2012 Jun 2019 OP
I don't care how much a reality-based, rational person one is, I'm with those who would hlthe2b Jun 2019 #1
Well if the demons they saw had goat faces defacto7 Jun 2019 #2

defacto7

(13,485 posts)
2. Well if the demons they saw had goat faces
Wed Jun 12, 2019, 02:22 PM
Jun 2019

it coincides with image motifs of Satan from literature. Maybe they were witches? Nope, just being sarcastic. I don’t connect with any of it.

I rented a house from a woman in southern England who claimed to be the reincarnation of a witch burned at the stake. She was one of my favorite people. I loved listening to her stories, tales and fortune telling. I never experienced any of the spirits she claimed were all around her property but it was a lovely experience.

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