When women in Scotland were cut on the forehead in the belief they were witches

William Grant, the fisherman jailed for three months in 1845 after cutting a woman on the forehead and claiming she was a witch.  PIC: Tain and District Museum.William Grant, the fisherman jailed for three months in 1845 after cutting a woman on the forehead and claiming she was a witch.  PIC: Tain and District Museum.
William Grant, the fisherman jailed for three months in 1845 after cutting a woman on the forehead and claiming she was a witch. PIC: Tain and District Museum.
He took a pocket knife and gouged it deep into her forehead, believing she had summoned dark powers in order to destroy his fishing nets.

William Grant, a fisherman from Portmahomack in Easter Ross, ended up in court in July 1845 for the assault against the wife of a fellow seaman.

He believed the woman, likely to have been called Mary Munro and around 70 at the time of the attack, had “dark dealings in sorcery” and put him under some sort of curse.

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