Helena Scheuberin was born and lived in
Innsbruck. She was married to Sebastian Scheuber, a prosperous
burgher. Scheuberin disagreed with the
witchhunting deomonologist doctrine that was being espoused by
Dominican inquisitors like Heinrich Kramer. Scheuberin was also accused of having at some point passed Kramer in the street, spat and cursed him publicly: "Fie on you, you bad monk, may the falling evil take you". During the witch trial, thirteen other people were accused. Scheuberin was further accused of having used magic to murder the noble knight Jörg Spiess. The knight had been afflicted by illness, and had been warned by his Italian doctor not to keep visiting Scheuberin to avoid getting killed. The defendants' lawyer, Johann Merwart of
Wemding, raised procedural objections, which the commissary general, Christian Turner, representing Bishop Georg Golser, upheld. In the end, Scheuberin and the other six women were all either freed or received mild sentences in the form of
penance. Scheuberin's witch trial was never resumed. == Historical significance ==