Margaret Dunholm
{{Short description|Scottish woman accused of witchcraft}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
Margaret Dunholm was a Scottish woman from Burncastle near Lauder who was accused of witchcraft and executed in 1649.
Her surname was also written as "Denholm, "Dinham" and "Dolmoune".
She was accused during the Great Scottish witch hunt of 1649–50. She was accused by Isobel Thompson from Stow, who was said to be a witch with a male accomplice.Mary Craig, Borders Witch Hunt (Edinburgh, Luath Press, 2020), p. 95.
John Kinkaid, a witch finder from Tranent who pricked the accused with a bodkin was paid £6 for "brodding" Margaret Dunholm, with £4 expenses for wine and food.John Croft, 'Expence of Burning a Witch, 1649', Excerpta Antiqua (London, 1797), p. 40: J. Sands, Sketches of Tranent in the Olden Time (Edinburgh, 1881), pp. 46-9. The bodkin used was also called a "brod".[https://dsl.ac.uk/entry/dost/brod_n_1 'Brod', Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue]
A record of the expenses of her trial and execution was first printed in 1797. Two barrels of tar were used to build the fire. The execution was supervised by the hangman of Haddington.John Croft, [https://archive.org/details/excerptaantiquao00crofiala/page/40/mode/2up 'Expence of Burning a Witch, 1649', Excerpta Historica (London, 1797), p. 40]
References
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{{Magic and Witchcraft in the British Isles}}
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Category:17th-century Scottish women