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Krystyna Ceynowa
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Krystyna Ceynowa, also spelled as Cejnowa , was an ethnic victim of by and an alleged . Accused of sorcery, she was subjected to the ordeal of water and drowned in Ceynowa (today Chałupy). She was the last person in Poland and among the last people in to be subjected to on the grounds of sorcery and witchcraft.

Ceynowa was the of a , living at Ceynowa on the , in the Province of Prussia. She was regarded as suspicious by the community for various reasons, including the fact that she never went to church, and it was said that black were attracted to her . This gave her a bad reputation in the eyes of the congregation and people suspected that she was a witch. However, the authorities at that time were not willing to conduct a witch trial, which at that time were illegal.

In 1836, she was taken captive by a lynch mob determined to test her to see if she was a witch. Her suppressors were called from , and she was subjected to the ordeal of water during an illegal trial. The ordeal took place in the — she was transported in a boat and thrown overboard. To the disbelief of many, she remained afloat for a long time, which was taken as an evidence of witchcraft, as none realized that her gown and skirt had acted as a buoy. When Ceynowa did not drown, the people found her to be a real witch and killed her with their paddles

(2026). 9788364447020, Wydawnictwo Naukowe Silva Rerum.
or (according to another account) she was stabbed to death.

Her case demonstrates that a belief in witchcraft continued among the public long after the legal authorities stopped accepting the charges of witchcraft, and that people occasionally took the law into their own hands when they suspected witchcraft.


See also


Sources
  • Chałupy
  • Last European witch
  • Klaus Klöppel, Olaf Matthei: Polnische Ostseeküste (The Polish East coast)
  • Nils Freytag: Hexenglauben im 19. Jahrhundert (Witch hunt in the 19th-century)

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