'' During the marriage trip, James VI met the Danish theologian
Niels Hemmingsen at
Roskilde on 11 March 1590 and they had a long discussion or debate in Latin. James VI, who had owned four of his books since 1575, gave him a silver gilt cup. The English ambassador in Scotland,
Robert Bowes heard they disagreed about
predestination. There is no record that their discussion involved the topic of witchcraft, a topic that Hemmingsen had published on. In July 1590 the Scottish churchman and diplomat
George Young, who had been with the King in Denmark, became involved in the case of a woman from
Lübeck because he could speak German. She said she brought a prophecy from magicians of the east, of a great king in north-west Europe and his noble future actions, a "prince in the north" meaning James VI. The king in the prophecy had a wound or mark on the side of his body. The woman had a letter written in Latin saying she brought news of the king's good fortune. She had tried to meet James VI at
Elsinore but missed seeing him there. In Edinburgh, she had an audience with Anne of Denmark, speaking in German. James VI thought she was probably a witch, but asked Young to interview her. At first she was reluctant to speak to him, preferring to talk to a "wise man" of her own choice and see the mark on the king's body first. The English diplomat Robert Bowes heard that she had come to Scotland because of her "inordinate love" for one of the queen's servants, and so her story of a prophecy was disregarded and her "credit cracked". This probably means she was questioned by Young to see if she was a
false prophet or witch, and he found her to be deranged by her love. The
North Berwick witch trials in 1590 involved a number of people from
East Lothian,
Scotland. They ran for two years, and implicated over seventy people. These included
Francis Stewart, 5th Earl of Bothwell. The "witches" were alleged to have held their covens on the Auld Kirk Green, part of the modern-day
North Berwick Harbour area. The confessions were extracted by
torture in the
Old Tolbooth,
Edinburgh. They mentioned weather magic used against the royal couple. One source for this story was published in a 1591 pamphlet
Newes from Scotland and was subsequently published in
King James's dissertation on contemporary necromancy titled
Daemonologie in 1597. The North Berwick trials were one of the first major witchcraft persecutions in Scotland, and began with this sensational case involving the royal houses of
Denmark-Norway and Scotland. King James VI had sailed to Norway to meet his bride Anne of Denmark, sister of
Christian IV of Denmark. During their return to Scotland they experienced terrible storms and had to shelter in Norway for several weeks before continuing. At this point, the interest in witch trials were revived in Denmark because of the gigantic, ongoing
Trier witch trials in Germany, which were described and discussed in Denmark. In Denmark, the admiral of the Danish fleet,
Peder Munk argued with the treasurer
Christoffer Valkendorff about the state of the ships of the bridal fleet, and blamed the mishaps on the wife of a high official in Copenhagen whom he had insulted. The
Copenhagen witch trials were held in Denmark in July 1590. One of the first Danish victims was
Anna Koldings, who, under pressure, divulged the names of five other women; one of whom was Malin, the wife of the burgomaster of Helsingor. They all confessed that they had been guilty of sorcery in raising storms that menaced Queen Anne's voyage, and that on
Halloween night they had sent devils to climb up the keel of her ship. In September, two women were burnt as witches at
Kronborg. James heard news from Denmark regarding this and decided to set up his own tribunal. ==Agnes Sampson and John Fian==