The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Torryburn ‘witch’ honoured in village

Frail woman died in prison in 1704 before she could be tried and burnt at the stake

- CHERYL PEEBLES cpeebles@thecourier.co.uk

A woman convicted of witchcraft, who faced being burnt at the stake, has been honoured in the village where she was persecuted 315 years ago.

Lilias Adie, an old woman from Torryburn, was forced to “confess” to the crimes of being a witch and having sex with the devil.

She died in prison in 1704 before she could be tried and executed, and was buried on the foreshore under a stone.

Villagers and members of the Fife Witches Remembered group gathered at her grave to lay wreaths and consider the injustice faced by Lilias and the thousands tried for witchcraft in Scotland from the 16th to the 18th Century.

They also pledged their determinat­ion to find her skull and the bones plundered from her grave in 1852, and launched a drive for a Fife witches memorial trail.

Historian Dr Louise Yeoman said it was emotional to see Lilias’s memory embraced on the anniversar­y of her death.

She said: “Lilias was cast out of this community... her body was taken and buried on the boundary between high and low tide.

“Today it is like she has been brought back into the community in an act of remembranc­e.”

Lilias was reckoned to have been in her 60s and frail, with failing eyesight, when she was tortured and terrorised into “confessing” to her crimes.

Dr Yeoman said Scotland’s witches could not be pardoned but added: “Do I think there should be a national statement that we think the witch hunt was wrong and we are sorry? Yes.”

West Fife and Coastal Villages councillor Kate Stewart is championin­g the bid to find Lilias’s remains.

She said: “Lilias is not forgotten, she has never been forgotten.

“We need to get her back. This has been a great injustice and we need to reverse that.”

Laying a wreath, Fife Depute Provost Julie Ford said: “It’s important to recognise that Lilias Adie and the thousands of other men and women accused of witchcraft in early modern Scotland were not the evil people history has portrayed them to be, but were the innocent victims of unenlighte­ned times.

“It’s time we recognised the injustice served upon them.”

Lilias’s skull was last known to have been exhibited at Glasgow’s Bellahoust­on Park in 1938.

Photograph­s taken of her skull in 1904 at St Andrews University were recently used by researcher­s at Dundee University to create an image of what she might have looked like.

Fife Council archaeolog­ist Douglas Speirs will talk about the life, death and resurrecti­on of Lilias Adie at Dunfermlin­e Library and Galleries on October 31.

“These men and women were not the evil people history has portrayed them to be... It’s time we recognised the injustice served upon them. DEPUTE PROVOST JULIE FORD

 ?? Picture: Kenny Smith. ?? Depute Provost Julie Ford with councillor­s Kate Stewart and Mino Manekshaw.
Picture: Kenny Smith. Depute Provost Julie Ford with councillor­s Kate Stewart and Mino Manekshaw.

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