Some of what the priests and royals and Judges did to witches was first to falsely accuse anyone that they didn't like to be a witch.
Then, they said they would cure the witch: that the so-called witch would:
First, be forced to hold onto two bars of red-hot iron. Later, the person's hands would be bound, and the witch put in jail overnight. In the morning, she or he would be "examined" so see if the so-called cure worked. They pronounced long and loud: if this person IS a witch, then, when we take the bandages off, there will be burn-marks and blisters.
If the person was found to be a (so-called witch), then they were "tested again" (in a loud voice the torturers would claim e.g. "If the witch is a witch, she will cough up water" and the they would grab the person, innocent or guilty, and "dunk them" (hold their heads under water until they nearly drowned, and then pull them out of the water).
Well, really. There's a whole long list of things they did: totally ignorant.
There have always been mixed feelings about witches. Down through history, people have been afraid of witches and worried that they had power to harm them. People have also sought out witches for cures and magic spells, though. So they loved and hated them, just as in today's world.
No, since werewolves do not exist. ----- There were werewolf trials, much as there were witch trials. And like most of the witch trials, they typically happened long after the Middle Ages ended. The Werewolf article in Wikipedia has no information on trials for people accused of being werewolves before the 16th century. It does have information on cures medieval people believed were effective. The link below is to the remedy section of the article.
The Reliv company does not say it does. If it did, the company would advertise that fact. Also, no clinical trials were ever conducted to see if it cures anything.
The Reliv company does not say it does. If it did, the company would advertise that fact. Also, no clinical trials were ever conducted to see if it cures anything.
The Reliv company does not say it does. If it did cure something, the company would advertise that fact. Also, no clinical trials were ever conducted to see if it cures anything.
The Reliv company does not say it does. If it did cure something, the company would advertise that fact. Also, no clinical trials were ever conducted to see if it cures anything.
The Reliv company does not say it does anything to reduce swelling. If it did that, the company would advertise that fact. Also, no clinical trials were ever conducted to see if it cures anything.
The Reliv company does not say it does. If it did, the company would advertise that fact. Also, no clinical trials were ever conducted to see if it cures anything.
There were several intersting cures for the black death. Medicinal marijuana, opium plants, and crack /cocaine were very good treaments during this period.
No herb cures alcoholism.
Nothing. It was part of the superstition of the time as so many cures were.
i thonk the cures are none