Kloka Anna
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Anna Johansdotter or Anna Jonsdotter (15 July 1797 – 1860), was a Swedish
cunning woman Cunning may refer to: * Cunning (owarai), a Japanese comedy group * Cunning folk, a type of folk magic user * Cunning (surname), a list of people with Cunning as a surname See also * Cunningham * * * Sneak (disambiguation) Sneak or Sneaky m ...
and
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. She has been the subject of much legends and myths. She is known and referred to by her nickname ''Kloka Anna'' ("Wise Anna").


Biography

Anna was born in a poor family in
Liatorp Liatorp is a locality situated in Älmhult Municipality, Kronoberg County, Sweden Sweden, formally the Kingdom of Sweden,The United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical Names states that the country's formal name is the Kingdom of S ...
in
Småland Småland () is a historical province () in southern Sweden. Småland borders Blekinge, Scania, Halland, Västergötland, Östergötland and the island Öland in the Baltic Sea. The name Småland literally means ''Small Lands''. The Latinized fo ...
. She worked as a farmhand until 1822, when she started to support herself as a cunning woman. She lived in Göteryd in 1822-184s and after that in Pjätteryd, where she became famous. According to legend, she acquired her wisdom after having eaten some
Vaccinium vitis-idaea ''Vaccinium vitis-idaea'', the lingonberry, partridgeberry, mountain cranberry or cowberry, is a small evergreen shrub in the heath family Ericaceae, that bears edible fruit. It is native to boreal forest and Arctic tundra throughout the Norther ...
which had been touched by a white snake, who had passed her path one day in the woods when she was a child. Anna was considered to be a
clairvoyant Clairvoyance (; ) is the magical ability to gain information about an object, person, location, or physical event through extrasensory perception. Any person who is claimed to have such ability is said to be a clairvoyant () ("one who sees cl ...
and to have the ability to heal the sick, and she received clients nationwide who consulted her in both these capacities. Anna adjusted her fee according to what the clients could afford to pay, which meant that she occasionally gave free help. She is described as a stout matron with dark piercing eyes and a dark forceful voice, and she was also known for her many black cats. In her capacity as a natural healer, she used herbal medicine: her daughter Kristina participated as her assistant in this field. As a Clairvoyant, she was often consulted for her ability to localise stolen property. She had a good reputation for succeeding with her tasks and was popular. Anna was reputed to be a white witch who could master sorcery, and she was known to threaten men, who had impregnated women and then abandoned them with sorcery unless they took responsibility. In 1847, Anna was convicted to fines or seven days for superstition after having taught the maid Johanna Jonsdotter to put a spell on her fiancé Johannes Jonsson. As was often the case in court cases against cunning folk, the conviction worked as advertise and gave her more assignments. Anna had eleven children in her first marriage and one in her second, of which two survived to adulthood. She had her godson Karl Hart as well as her maid Ingrid Johansson, called Lill-ingerten, to succeed her. The myths surrounding Kloka Anna is kept at Folklivsarkivet.


See also

*
Karin Olofsdotter Karin Olofsdotter Bång, also known as ''Bång-Karin'' (1720–1790), was a Swedish spiritual ecstatic leader. She was the leader of an apocalyptic cult together with Mårten Thunberg, vicar of the Lillhärdal parish in Jämtland, a cult known a ...
*
Anna Johansdotter Norbäck Anna Johansdotter Norbäck (25 March 1804 – 3 January 1879), also known as ('Mother Anna') and , was a Swedish religious leader, the founder and leader of the religious movement '' Annaniterna'' ('the Annanites'), who was named after her; howev ...


Sources

* http://kjell.smult.com/liatorp/kloka_anna.htm * Hellspong, Löfgren, 1974, land och stad, Malmö: Liber * Frykman, Löfgren, 1979, Den kultiverade människan, Malmö :Liber * Botare, en bok om etnomedicin i Norden, 1980, Falköping, LTS Förlag, Stockholm * Eriksson, 1983, Västerlandets idéhistoria 1800-1950 . * Brogårdh, 1964, Om kloka gummor och gubbar, Norra Skånes Civiltryckeri, Hässleholm * Kronobergs läns Hembygdsförening, 1995 - 1996, Kronobergskvinnor, Kronobergsboken. {{DEFAULTSORT:Anna, Kloka 1797 births 1860 deaths Cunning folk 19th-century Swedish people 19th-century Swedish women