At
20 Minutes
, we love stories where perlimpinpin powder and toad slime mingle.
For Halloween, we offer you a series on wizards and witches from here.
In Castellar, on the heights of Menton, 399 years ago, Peirinetta Raibauda was convicted of witchcraft and sentenced to death.
She had notably been found guilty “of ritual crimes of which young boys had been victims”.
In Castellar, on the heights of Menton, in a bend of the avenue Saint-Antoine, a small chapel is discreet.
The building and its open porch, typical of Provençal rural architecture, do not look like much.
Yet they were the scene, 399 years ago, of an unbearable horror scene.
A "witch" was hanged and burned there.
A story that
20 Minutes
tells you on the occasion of Halloween.
“In 1623 and on November 16, Peirinetta Raibauda died at the hands of justice, having been strangled as a witch”, explains a sign affixed there by the previous municipality of this municipality of a thousand souls.
He specifies that the body of this woman was then “burnt in front of the door” of the religious building.
The last execution in the Alpes-Maritimes
Today, the tragic end of his existence would be "a little forgotten", confides to
20 Minutes
the deputy mayor Hervé Léonet.
"For a while, in connection with a Children's Day and the summer solstice, we symbolically burned a witch" in cardboard, he specifies, but "this is no longer the case".
The story, however, would be important.
It would in fact be the last execution of a witch in the Alpes-Maritimes department, according to Edmond Rossi.
The historian, who has gone through the episcopal archives of the region, has dedicated a passage from his book
Les Aventures du diable en Pays d'Azur to
him .
"In the guise of black cats"
Peirinetta Raibauda would thus have been part of a group of five women judged from September 1622 on the occasion of a witchcraft trial.
She was "accused of dragging her accomplices to the sabbats where, under the guise of black cats, they worshiped the devil in the ruins of the medieval village of Vieux-Castellar".
Worse, she was also found guilty "of ritual crimes of which young boys had been victims".
Our file on Halloween
The parish priest of Castellar at the time, Don Bernardino Balanco, "will try in vain to save the unfortunate, by affirming that we were dealing above all with simple-minded people and not with henchmen of the Devil", specifies Edmond Rossi.
But a death sentence will finally be pronounced on January 31, 1623 against Peirinetta Raibauda.
"Witches" wrongly accused of food shortages
The website of the town hall of Castellar specifies that the "witch was hanged and then burned" and "her ashes scattered in the medieval site".
As if to warn of the fate that would be reserved for those who wanted to imitate him?
At the time, "the women of the country, followers of herbal medicine, were often suspected by the clergy of strange powers, such as that of causing famine by acting on the fate of the crops", recalls the historian.
However, "only climatic disturbances, such as the terrible winter of January 1623 or the previous heat waves were guilty of these calamities", he concludes.
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