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Rylan Clark

BBC’s Witches of Essex: Rylan and Alice Roberts revisit trials

21 December 2025Updated:10 February 2026 Culture No Comments5 Mins Read
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BBC is turning the spotlight back on one of England’s darkest chapters with Witches of Essex, a three-part documentary series that revisits the county’s notorious 16th- and 17th-century witch trials through original records and modern expertise. Fronted by Essex native Rylan Clark alongside anthropologist Alice Roberts, the series positions itself as both historical investigation and human story—reconstructing the lives, accusations and deaths of women swept up in a wave of fear, rumor and coercive justice.

Set up like an “incident room,” the programme draws on original court documents and guidance from historians, psychologists and medical experts to interrogate how allegations formed, how evidence was manufactured or misread, and why communities repeatedly targeted certain women. It is a format designed to make familiar headlines—“witch,” “curse,” “dark magic”—feel less like folklore and more like the paper trail of real prosecutions.

A modern investigation built on historical records

According to the series details, Rylan Clark and Alice Roberts work through case material as if reopening cold cases. The approach leans heavily on archival sources, with court paperwork acting as the backbone for each episode’s narrative. That emphasis matters: witch trials are often retold as gothic spectacle, but surviving documents reveal the mechanics of accusation—who spoke first, which grievances were aired, what “proof” was accepted, and how authorities escalated suspicion into punishment.

By pairing a presenter rooted in the region with an academic host, BBC appears to be aiming for accessibility without sacrificing rigor. The series also signals an interest in the psychological and medical dimensions of testimony and belief—how stress, illness, social conflict or misinterpretation could be reframed as evidence of witchcraft, particularly in periods of instability.

Episode guide: three Essex cases, three entry points into a panic

Episode 1: Hatfield Peveril

The opening episode, titled “Hatfield Peveril,” investigates what the programme describes as one of the first witch trials in the area, involving an allegation of death by dark magic. Early trials are crucial for understanding how legal and cultural templates formed—how communities learned what to accuse, and how courts learned what to accept. The episode’s focus suggests an interest in the moment suspicion becomes procedure.

Episode 2: St Osyth

“St Osyth” traces a case that begins with a petty argument between two friends—then spirals into untruths, torture and eventual execution. The framing highlights a recurring dynamic in witch prosecutions: everyday disputes could be weaponised once a community had a supernatural explanation ready to hand. The mention of torture also points to the coercive conditions under which “confessions” and accusations were extracted, raising questions about reliability, fear and survival.

Episode 3: Manningtree

The final episode, “Manningtree,” asks what motivated the Witchfinder General, the notorious figure associated with the pursuit and execution of hundreds of women. While the title evokes a single individual, the broader question is structural: what incentives—financial, political, religious, reputational—sustained a system in which accusations multiplied and due process collapsed? Ending the series here positions the Essex story within the larger national machinery of persecution.

Why Essex witch trials still resonate

Interest in witch trials persists because they sit at the intersection of law, belief and social control. In the Essex cases, the series promises to foreground the women at the center of accusations, not just the sensational claims made about them. That shift aligns with a wider public reappraisal of how historical narratives label victims as villains—and how gender, poverty, disability or outsider status could make someone vulnerable to communal blame.

The inclusion of psychologists and medical experts signals that Witches of Essex may also explore how symptoms or behaviors—then poorly understood—were interpreted through a spiritual framework. In practical terms, that means examining how miscarriage, illness, mental distress, or even sharp-tongued social conflict could be turned into “evidence,” especially when authorities and neighbors were primed to see malice in misfortune.

Production and release details

Witches of Essex is directed by Paul Olding and produced by Mindhouse with GroupM Motion Entertainment, for the British Broadcasting Corporation. The series is listed as three episodes, each running 44 minutes, with the following dates:

  • “Hatfield Peveril” — 15 Oct 2025 (TV-14)

  • “St Osyth” — 22 Oct 2025 (TV-14)

  • “Manningtree” — 29 Oct 2025 (TV-PG)

By spacing the episodes across October, the BBC is scheduling the series during a season when audiences often seek darker historical storytelling—while also providing enough time between installments for discussion, debate and renewed interest in local history.

What viewers can expect from the series

Rather than treating witch trials as distant myth, Witches of Essex is positioned as an evidence-led re-examination of how accusations were built and lives were destroyed. The “incident room” setup, the reliance on original court documents, and the involvement of multiple disciplines suggest a careful attempt to balance narrative drive with accountability to sources.

For viewers, the series offers a way to understand how quickly communities can convert suspicion into certainty—and how institutions can amplify fear when safeguards fail. The story may be centuries old, but the questions it raises about rumor, authority and scapegoating remain uncomfortably current.

Dailyza will be watching for how the BBC handles the tension between compelling television and the ethical responsibility of telling stories rooted in real suffering—especially when the archive preserves the voices of accusers more clearly than those of the accused.

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