Spain's Catalonia to honour victims of witch trials

The lives and tragic deaths of hundreds of women, deemed "witches", will now be reviewed to raise public awareness about their fate.

An investigation by local scientific journal Sapiens and research by Barcelona historian Pau Castell found that Catalonia was one of the first regions in Europe to carry out witch hunts, starting in 1471.
AFP

An investigation by local scientific journal Sapiens and research by Barcelona historian Pau Castell found that Catalonia was one of the first regions in Europe to carry out witch hunts, starting in 1471.

Catalonia's regional parliament has passed a resolution to rehabilitate the memory of hundreds of women executed for "witchcrafts" between the 15th and 18th centuries.

The move on Wednesday was driven by pro-independence and left-wing groups who believe these women were "victims of misogynistic persecution". 

The groups want their memory to be honoured by naming streets after them.

"We have recently discovered the names of more than 700 women who were persecuted, tortured and executed between the 15th and 18th centuries," say the groups behind the resolution.

The resolution was passed by a large majority of 114 in favour, 14 against and six abstentions.

The lives and tragic deaths of these women will now be reviewed from a gender perspective to raise public awareness about their fate, echoing similar initiatives in Spain's Navarre region but also in Scotland, Switzerland and Norway.

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From 'witchhunts' to femicides

The centuries-long witch-hunt was particularly intense in this northeastern region of Spain.

An investigation by local scientific journal Sapiens and research by Barcelona historian Pau Castell found that Catalonia was one of the first regions in Europe to carry out witch hunts, starting in 1471.

It is also considered one of the regions where the most executions took place.

"Before they called us witches, now they call us 'feminazis' or hysterical or sexually frustrated. Before they carried out witch hunts, now we call them femicides," said regional deputy Jenn Diaz of the ruling ERC.

READ MORE: Pentecostal pastors continue to brand children as witches in Nigeria

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