Thuridur Olafsdottir
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Thuridur Olafsdottir (Icelandic: ''Þuríður Ólafsdóttir''; died 1678) was an Icelandic woman accused of being a witch. She was executed for sorcery by burning together with her son Jon Tordarson. She was the only woman who is confirmed to have been executed for witchcraft on Iceland. Thuridur Olafsdottir left Skagafjörður in Norðurland with her son Jon Tordarson for
Vestfjord Vestfjord, meaning "West Fjord" in the Danish language, is a fjord in King Christian X Land, eastern Greenland. This fjord is part of the Scoresby Sound system in the area of Sermersooq municipality. Geography This tributary fjord extends between ...
in 1677. In their new parish, her son boasted that his mother could walk on water, which gave them a rumor of sorcery. When the vicar's wife Helga Halldorsdottir in
Selárdalur Selárdalur () is the second most westerly of the Ketildalir in Arnarfjörður in Iceland. It was one of the main settled areas in the Westfjords. The eponymous Selárdalur parish was formerly considered one of the country's best parishes, after St ...
fell sick, they were suspected of having caused it by the use of magic. They were sentenced guilty as charged and executed by burning, as was the method of execution for witchcraft on Iceland. The most detailed information about the case is from the '' Mælifellsannáll'': :"Þuríður Ólafsdóttir and her son Jon was burned in Vestfjord; they were accused of magic ('' galdur''); the woman had lived in Skagafjörður (in Nordland) all her life and never dealt with galdur. As all paupers she had left for the West in the spring of 1677 with her son Jon, of whom little is known other than he neither had a rumor of having dealt with ''galdur''. He allegedly claimed, that she had passed all the waterfalls in Nordland without horse nor boat, only by the help of ''galdur'', and she must therefore have had knowledge in sorcery. People believed his lies and they were later arrested and burnt, something he did not believe would happen." The '' Eyrarannáll'' chronicle noted: "two relations from Nordland, Þuríður and her son Jon Tordarson, were burned for having put illness upon Helga Halldorsdottir i Selardal". The case is somewhat unusual: of the 120 witch trials held on Iceland between 1625 and 1686, only ten were against women,Ankarloo, Bengt & Henningsen, Gustav (red.), Skrifter. Bd 13, Häxornas Europa 1400-1700 : historiska och antropologiska studier, Nerenius & Santérus, Stockholm, 1987 and though two women are traditionally considered to have been executed for this crime, the execution of Thuridur Olafsdottir is the only execution of witchcraft confirmed to have been performed.


See also

*
Kirkjuból witch trial The Kirkjuból witch trial was a witch trial that took place in Kirkjuból in 1656, in what is today Ísafjörður, in Iceland. It is the most famous witch trial in Iceland. Witch trial The plaintiff in the trial was pastor Jón Magnússon (auth ...


Notes


Sources

* Jan Guillou, Häxornas försvarare, Piratförlaget 2002 () * Ólína Þorvarðardóttir: Brennuöldin. Galdur og galdratrú í málskjölum og munnmælum. Háskólaútgáfan. Reykjavík, 2000 People executed by Norway by burning People executed by Denmark–Norway 1678 deaths Icelandic people executed for witchcraft Year of birth unknown 17th-century executions by Norway Thuridur Olafsdottir {{Iceland-bio-stub