The Velvet Guillotine
Matthew Hopkins was not a judge. He was not an official inquisitor. He was not appointed by Parliament. He called himself the Witchfinder General. And for a brief, brutal stretch of the English Civil War, that was enough. In this Velvet Guillotine episode, April Rain examines Matthew Hopkins, the self-styled Witchfinder General whose name became permanently attached to one of the darkest outbreaks of witch persecution in English history. Active mainly in East Anglia during the 1640s, Hopkins turned fear into procedure, suspicion into evidence, and accusation into a traveling business model. This is not the story of a lone monster wandering the countryside with a rope and a Bible. It is the story of a man who appeared at exactly the kind of historical moment that makes men like him useful: civil war, religious fracture, legal uncertainty, economic fear, and communities desperate for someone to tell them why everything felt cursed. Hopkins offered an answer. The witch. This episode traces how the Witchfinder General operated: the accusations, the searches for witch marks, the pricking, the watching, the sleep deprivation, the swimming tests, the supposed familiars, the forced confessions, and the way every frightened community could be persuaded that the devil was not somewhere far away, but living next door in the body of a woman they already mistrusted. April looks at Hopkins not as folklore, not as horror-movie decoration, and not as a supernatural figure, but as something more useful and more frightening: a professionalized accuser. A man who learned how to make fear actionable. A man whose authority was unstable, but whose confidence made it feel real. A man who understood that if the machinery was already hungry, he did not have to build it. He only had to feed it. Because the Witchfinder General did not need witches to be real. He needed people to believe the process was. This episode also sits inside the larger Velvet Guillotine witch-trial arc: the Malleus Maleficarum, Würzburg, Bamberg, the machinery of mass accusation, and the recurring pattern underneath them all. The specific language changes. The costumes change. The office titles change. But the mechanism keeps appearing: a frightened community, a named internal enemy, weak protections for the accused, and someone willing to profit from the panic. Matthew Hopkins died young. The title he invented outlived him. And that may be the most useful warning in the whole story. This episode contains discussion of witch trials, religious persecution, torture-adjacent interrogation methods, execution, misogyny, forced confession, and systemic accusation. Listener discretion is advised.
21 episodes
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