WINNING!
But seriously, folks: A witch in Medieval times.
In Medievel times, there were no such things as a Witch. To see a Witch, they would accuse a woman, and then they would burn her to see if she died. If she lived (no woman did), she was a witch.
Drown in a well, toss from a cliff, burn at the cross.
in the enchanted forest.first,use the witch talisman in the bowl mark star.the witch give you net.use the net for catching fairies.
a thron room is a room witch the king or queen sat
Not in UK and if anywhere else, then not to the extreme level that it was in medieval times!!
You are thinking of a ' fairytale ' as there is no ' reward ' as there isn't such a race or ' witches ' to be captured.
In the medieval times, "witches" were sometimes thrown into ponds or other bodies of water to see if they float, following the common belief that witches floated. It they didn't float, they were declared not a witch, but sometimes the result was that the person had drowned anyway. If someone was declared a witch, then she was therefore not Christian and should be burned.
Be a woman, and speak your mind from time to time and not act as an inanimate object in the presence of men. That would do.
In medieval times, there was was a point where the consequences for being considered a witch were horrible. If others pointed at you and said 'She/he is a witch!', then you would be tested. They didn't even try to find out if that person was telling the truth. They would tie you up, and chuck you in the river. If you sunk, you weren't a witch, but if you didn't you were, and they would kill you. So in the end, either way you would die!
Of those who practiced or were found guilty of witchcraft, clearly some were Catholic, and some were not. In point of fact, some were Jewish, and some others were probably genuinely trying to curse people. It is important to note that in Much, possibly most, of Europe, belief in witchcraft was illegal in the Middle Ages because it was regarded as a superstition. So the laws of the Carolingian Empire, the Kingdom of Lombardy, and Anglo Saxon England all made it a capital crime to execute a witch. There were places where there were medieval witch trials, but not many. The famous witch hunts and executions were not medieval, but a product of the Renaissance.
What a cute idea! Medieval costumes for young girls could be a damsel, a queen, a princess, a serving girl, a peasant, a sorceress, a more Shakespearean type witch, and for a famous Medieval girl how about Joan of Arc?
the name Norwich comes from the the medieval times nor for Normans and witch but now changed to wich because of the witches that were killed in that area