Richard de Ledrede,
Bishop of Ossory, sought to uphold the laws of the church and morality and seek out heretics as soon as he arrived in Kilkenny. When the case of Alice Kyteler was presented before him in 1324, he began his larger project of addressing witchcraft. Ledrede made initial attempts to have Kyteler arrested, and Kyteler called on the assistance of powerful friends. The bishop wrote to the
Chancellor of Ireland,
Roger Utlagh (Outlaw), demanding that she be arrested. Using the
decretal Ut Inquisitiones (1298), designed to protect the faith, Ledrede demanded that secular powers concede to church wishes, and this point of law became a thorny issue throughout the trial. Kyteler was related by marriage to the Chancellor (he was probably her first husband's brother) and he asked the bishop to drop the case. The chancellor demanded that Kyteler be
excommunicated for at least 40 days before the trial, which caused a delay in the proceedings. This allowed Kyteler to flee to Roger Utlagh. Ledrede accused Utlagh of harbouring heretics, but a commission cleared him of any wrongdoing. The bishop then charged Kyteler and her son, William Outlaw, with the crime of heresy. William was a powerful man and was related to many in the ruling classes. He called upon his friend, Sir Arnold le Poer, a Senior Official in
Dublin and seneschal of Kilkenny, who had de Ledrede thrown in prison in
Kilkenny Castle. Ledrede, despite his limited political connections compared to his captors, was released from prison after he ordered the
diocese be placed on an
interdict. He would not allow any religious ceremonies to occur until he was released. It would seem, although her testimony was likely forced and unreliable, that the accusers gained most of their information from this confession. Although the testimony did implicate Kyteler in performing heresy, questions concerning Petronella's credibility came to light, especially when examining the contents of her confession. In Ledrede's retelling of Petronilla's confession, he writes: 'On one of these occasions, by the crossroads outside the city, she had made an offering of three cocks to a certain demon whom she called Robert, son of Art (
Robertum filium Artis), from the depths of the underworld. She had poured out the cocks' blood, cut the animals into pieces and mixed the intestines with spiders and other black worms like scorpions, with a herb called
milfoil as well as with other herbs and horrible worms. She had boiled this mixture in a pot with the brains and clothes of a boy who had died without baptism and with the head of a robber who had been decapitated ... Petronilla said she had several times at Alice's instigation and once in her presence, consulted demons and received answers. She had consented to a pact whereby she would be the medium between Alice and the said Robert, her friend. In public, she said that with her own eyes, she had seen the aforesaid demon as three shapes (
praedictus daemon tertius), in the form of three black men (
aethiopum) each carrying an iron rod in the hand. This apparition happened by daylight (
de die) before the said Dame Alice, and, while Petronilla herself was watching, the apparition had intercourse with Alice. After this disgraceful act, with her own hand, she [Alice?] wiped clean the disgusting place with sheets (
kanevacio) from her own bed.'Despite the clear usage of torture, Ledrede referred to the acts committed against Petronilla as
floggings. His assertion that flogging occurred suggests that what she went through was an act of punishment rather than an attempt to gain a confession was potentially an attempt to give credibility to her statements.
Chronology of events This chronology relies on Callan's 2015 book: • c. 1280—Alice Kyteler marries her first husband William Outlaw. •
1302—Alice and her second husband, Adam le Blund, are accused of homicide. • c. 1316—Alice's third husband, Richard de Valle, dies and she successfully sues his son to ensure she receives the widow's share. •
1317 April—Pope
John XXII appoints
Richard de Ledrede as
Bishop of Ossory. • October— Ledrede arrives in Ossory and holds a
synod. •
1320 August—John XXII sends a letter to the
justiciar of Ireland regarding complaints of harassment and imprisonment made by Ledrede. •
1324—Ledrede accuses Alice Kyteler and her associates of witchcraft and heresy. • March/April—Arnold le Poer imprisons Ledrede for 17 days. • Dublin parliament; the magnates, including Arnold le Poer and Maurice FitzThomas, swear to discipline their own people and followers (lineages). • Arrest of heretics by Ledrede. • November—Petronilla of Meath burnt for heresy and witchcraft. • William Outlaw's penance payment is guaranteed by the magnates. •
1325 January—
Alexander Bicknor deserts to the queen's party while on an embassy to
France. • 1326—The feud between the le Poers and Maurice FitzThomas worsens. • Maurice FitzThomas and John le Poer, baron of
Donoil, are allowed four months to discipline their followers; Arnold le Poer goes to England. • 1327 January—Deposition of
Edward II by
Queen Isabella and
Roger Mortimer. • 1327/8—Ledrede appeals to Isabella and is given permission to come to court but fails to use it, later claiming that Bicknor and Outlaw had closed the ports against him. • Arnold is confirmed as seneschal of Kilkenny and given custody of Kilkenny Castle. • The "
Munster war" breaks out between the le Poers and Maurice. A jury later claims Ledrede attended a meeting to coordinate Maurice's "rebellion". • Ledrede is alleged to have instigated an attack on the le Poer castle of Moytobir. •
1328—
Adam Duff O'Toole burnt for heresy • Justiciar orders the magnates to stop fighting • Arnold returns. Ledrede charges him with heresy and has him imprisoned in
Dublin Castle. • Ledrede sends a petition to court complaining of his treatment by Arnold. • The justiciar, Thomas FitzJohn, sends the king an indictment of Ledrede by the people of Ossory, seizes his temporalities and summons him to Dublin. •
1329 January—Roger Outlaw purges himself at the Dublin parliament of Ledrede's heresy accusations. • March—Arnold dies in prison. • Archbishop Bicknor summons Ledrede to Dublin to answer charges of aiding and abetting heretics. • June—Ledrede flees Ireland and England, ignoring a royal summons to appear before the king. Writs are issued for his arrest. •
Edward III warns John XXII against Ledrede. Bicknor excommunicates Ledrede. •
1330 October—Edward III seizes control from his mother and Mortimer. He sends further letters warning the Pope against Ledrede. •
1331 May—At the request of the papacy, Edward III restores Ledrede's temporalities. • 1332—The cathedral roof paid for by William Outlaw collapses during a storm. • A jury accuses Ledrede of having conspired to support Maurice in his "rebellion" of 1327. • The dean and chapter claim Ledrede purged himself of rebellion at the Kilkenny parliament of 1328. •
1333—Ledrede returns to England; the Pope urges Edward III to assist him and other Irish prelates against heretics. • John XXII writes to the
Archbishop of Cashel ordering him to promulgate in his province a
processus pontificum against heretics. • 1335 November—Pope
Benedict XII writes to Edward III on behalf of Ledrede. •
1339 June—Edward III orders the writs against Ledrede to be revoked. • September—Edward III orders the
escheator of Kilkenny to obey the writ issued in July restoring Ledrede's temporalities. • Roger Outlaw dies while holding office as deputy judicier; Bicknor succeeds him. • 1341 February—Ledrede sends a petition to the king claiming that Bicknor had planned to murder him in 1329. • 1343—Bicknor is cited by the papacy for impeding Ledrede in his prosecution of heretics. • Ossory is exempted from the jurisdiction of Dublin. The papacy orders an inquiry into Bicknor's protection of heretics. • 1347 April—Ledrede receives a royal pardon and secures his temporalities back from the king; he returns to his diocese. • 1349 July—Death of Alexander Bicknor. • Restoration of Ossory to the jurisdiction of Dublin. • 1351—Ledrede refuses a royal tax on the clergy, the 1347 pardon is revoked and the temporalities resumed. • 1355—Ledrede is granted a royal pardon and his temporalities are restored. He is accused of instigating a violent attack on a priory. • 1356/7—
Edward III writes to Pope
Innocent VI asking for Ledrede's removal, accusing him of senility, malice, and persecuting his parishioners. • c1360—Ledrede dies. ==Significance==