Lisbeth Nypan

Lisbeth (Elisabeth) Nypan
Born
Elisabeth Pedersdotter

circa 1610
Høllandet (now Hølonda), Trøndhjems amt
(now Sør-Trøndelag), Norway
Died1670 (aged 59–60)
Trondheim, Trøndhjems amt
(now Sør-Trøndelag, Norway
Cause of deathExecuted by burning at stake
Known forAlleged witch
Criminal chargeWitchcraft
Criminal penaltyExecution by burning at stake
SpouseOle Nypan
ChildrenIngeborg, Ane, Marit, Peder
Parent(s)Peder Kulgrandstad, Mother Unknown

Lisbet Nypan (née Elisabeth Pedersdotter Kulgrandstad) (c. 1610 – September 1670) was an alleged Norwegian witch. As one of the most famous victims of the witch-hunts in her country, she was also the penultimate defendant to be executed for witchcraft in Norway.

The case against Lisbet and her husband, Ole Nypan, is the only Norwegian witch-hunt described by Rossell Hope Robbins in his 1959 book, Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology.[1] Its fame grew a few years later, in 1962, when it was dramatized in Norway by Torbjørn Prestvik in his novel, Lisbet Nypan : Den siste hekseprosess i Trøndelag som førte til bål og brann (Lisbet Nypan : The Last Witch Trial in Trøndelag, from the Beginning to the Burning).

  1. ^ (en) Rossell Hope Robbins (1912-1990), Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology (New York: Crown Publishers, 1959)