On this date in 1571, Anneken Hendriks was martyred in Amsterdam as an Anabaptist.
She was about 53 years old and illiterate, and had come to Amsterdam from Frisia. Considering her outlaw faith could have done better than to move in next to the underbailiff. He soon apprehended his neighbor for “having forsaken the mother, the holy church, now about six years ago and having adopted the cursed doctrine of the Mennonists, by whom she had been baptized on her faith.”
That’s per the Martyrs’ Mirror catalog of Protestant martyrdoms. For the 1685 edition of this volume, Dutch illustrator Jan Luyken favored poor Anneken Hendriks with one of his grisly illustrations.
Anabaptists — practitioners of adult baptism — were heavily persecuted in the Low Countries and throughout Europe, particularly after right-thinking folk were shocked by the short-lived Anabaptist commune at Muenster. Anneken Hendriks, sure enough, had by the words of the sentence against her “not been for six or seven years at confession, or at the holy, reverend sacrament, but went to the meetings of the cursed sect of Mennonists or anabaptists, so that they have even held secret meetings or assemblies at her house.” She also threatened traditional marriage by “marrying” her husband “by night, at a country seat, after the manner of the Mennonists.”
Our source here notes that Anneken Hendriks was tortured by rack and strappado for the names of other Anabaptists. She refused to divulge any, but she was chatty enough on the way to her burning — warning her former neighbor that God would punish him if he kept up the Judas act, and spurning her Catholic would-be confessors — until they stuffed her mouth with gunpowder to still her heretical tongue.
On this day..
- 1066: John Scotus, sacrificed to Radegast
- 1657: Gian Rinaldo Monaldeschi, Queen Christina betrayer
- 1945: The Rüsselsheim Massacre perpetrators
- 1735: Elizabeth Armstrong, oyster knifer
- 1882: Samuel and Milton Hodge
- 1944: Thirteen from the Ehrenfeld Group and the Edelweiss Pirates
- 1939: Nelson Charles
- 2009: John Muhammad, D.C. sniper
- 1834: The bushrangers John Jenkins and Thomas Tattersdale
- 1865: Henry Wirz, for detainee abuse
- 1780: Corregidor Antonio de Arriaga, by his slave
- 1954: Hossein Fatemi, before the blowback
- 1995: Ken Saro-Wiwa and the Ogoni Nine