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124 are in the twelve findings of the court In 1756 a fourteen-year-old girl was beheaded as a witch at Landshut, in Bavaria, because she had made a wager with the devil. In 1782, at Glarus, in Switzerland, a maid-servant was executed for witchcraft; she had given pin-seed to a child, which germinated in its stomach so that it spat pins. The last witch execution in Germany was in 1775, a woman charged with carnal intercourse with Satan. In Poland and Hungary witch-persecutions continued until the end of the eighteenth century. In 1672 Colbert directed the judges in France to receive no accusation of sorcery against anyone, but in 1718 the Parliament of Rouen burned a man for that crime. In 1781 the Inquisition burned a witch at Seville for making a pact with Satan and practicing fornication with him. "Incredible to relate, on the 22d of April, 1751, a rabble of about five thousand persons beset the workhouse at Tring, in Hertfordshire, where, seizing Luke Osborne and his wife, two persons suspected of witchcraft, they ducked them in a pond till the old woman died; after which her corpse was put to bed to her husband by the mob, of whom only one person was hanged for this detestable outrage." The last law about witchcraft in the British Islands was an Irish statute, which was not repealed until 1821. In 1823 a court in the island of Martinique condemned a man to the galleys for life for "vehement suspicion" of sorcery. In 1863 an old man was put to death by a mob, as a wizard, at Essex, England. In 1873 a witch was burned in Spanish South America. In 1874, in Mexico, several persons were