In 1645 a young Cornish woman named Ann Jefferies (aka Anne Jefferies and Ann Jeffries) began to see fairies. In the next year she would heal and curse people with the help of her fairy friends; predict the future; and support the royal cause in Cornwall - the Civil War was ending there. Her flirtation with the supernatural would bring her, in 1647, to jail and before the judges at the Assizes in Bodmin. In a decade when many witches were killed she was lucky to survive the experience. This volume brings together thirteen different sources for Ann ranging from forgotten royalist letters from 1647 to a 2017 essay on Ann and shamanic experiences. This is the second edition of the popular Pwca Book on Ann's life.
Source 1: The Prophetess of Bodmin, 1647; Source 2: Pitt Pamphlet, 1696; Source 3: Pitt Letter, 1696; Source 4: The Morgan Pamphlet, 1732; Source 5: Gilbert on Fairies, 1817; Source 6: Ann’s Picture, 1837; Source 7: Hunt on Ann, 1865; Source 8: Boase’s Biographical Research, 1874; Source 9: Tedder on Moses, 1885-1900; Source 10: Baring-Gould on Ann and Pitt, 1909; Source 11: New Discoveries, 1924; Source 12: Spooner Finds ‘Elizabeth’; 1931, Source 13: Rushton on Shamanic Ann, 2017; Appendix 1: The Great 1924 Pixie Debate; Appendix 2: Patricia (x2) and Ann.
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