About Subscribe Submit news Get in touch
 
Home Opinion In depth Video LIVE news Interviews Company profiles Events diary Jobs
Two-hundred-year-old mummified cat among the exhibits as Scotland’s first witchcraft museum prepares to open in Edinburgh | Planet Rides
     

news

Two-hundred-year-old mummified cat among the exhibits as Scotland’s first witchcraft museum prepares to open in Edinburgh

A museum dedicated to sharing Scotland’s history with the occult will open in Edinburgh at the end of February




Museum founder Ash Mills with a 200-year-old mummified cat   Credit: Ash Mills

A museum dedicated to witchcraft will open its doors in Edinburgh, Scotland, at the end of this month.

Located in Edinburgh’s historic Old Town, the Museum of Witchcraft, Magic and Fortune-telling will explore Scotland’s occult past, including the witch hunts that happened in the country through the 16th to 18th centuries and saw at least 4,000 people tried for witchcraft.

Among the exhibits will be a 200-year-old mummified cat that had been buried alive in the walls of a family home in France to ‘ward off evil spirits’. Other artefacts will include ‘potion’ bottles that once belonged to people who were branded as witches, as well as mystical amulets and other mummified animals.

The museum will also be ‘guarded’ by a 19th-century ram horn, which is said to provide protection to the building and its contents.

Museum founder Ash Mills said that he wanted to share the history of Scotland’s witches after Nicola Sturgeon and the Scottish government publicly apologised to the thousands of women executed as witches under the Witchcraft Act of 1563.

“Putting aside Edinburgh being the birthplace of Harry Potter, Scotland actually already had a big history surrounding the fear of witchcraft,” Mills told Metro.

“It was one of the countries within Europe that witnessed persecution in mass numbers during the 17th-century witch craze.

“After over three years, both the Scottish Parliament and the Church of Scotland have made their apologies for those accused of being witches.

“I felt it was time to raise awareness of not only the witch craze but Scotland’s rich magical heritage.”


Museums and galleries

 

Universal’s Epic Universe soft opens to public ahead of May opening





Paw Patrol to launch at Chessington with UK’s first themed land opening in 2026





New Simworx Helios Experience attraction opens at Portlantis




Industry insights



Maximising ROI: Revenue strategies for operators



Video



Giant-8-Loop on show as Maurer Rides heads to Amsterdam for IAAPA Expo Europe


In Depth



Supplier Showcase 2025: The biggest attractions projects landing worldwide this year



© Kazoo 5 Limited 2025
About Subscribe Get in touch
 
Opinion In depth Interviews
LIVE news Profiles Diary Video
Jobs
Two-hundred-year-old mummified cat among the exhibits as Scotland’s first witchcraft museum prepares to open in Edinburgh | Planet Rides
news

Two-hundred-year-old mummified cat among the exhibits as Scotland’s first witchcraft museum prepares to open in Edinburgh

A museum dedicated to sharing Scotland’s history with the occult will open in Edinburgh at the end of February




Museum founder Ash Mills with a 200-year-old mummified cat   Credit: Ash Mills

A museum dedicated to witchcraft will open its doors in Edinburgh, Scotland, at the end of this month.

Located in Edinburgh’s historic Old Town, the Museum of Witchcraft, Magic and Fortune-telling will explore Scotland’s occult past, including the witch hunts that happened in the country through the 16th to 18th centuries and saw at least 4,000 people tried for witchcraft.

Among the exhibits will be a 200-year-old mummified cat that had been buried alive in the walls of a family home in France to ‘ward off evil spirits’. Other artefacts will include ‘potion’ bottles that once belonged to people who were branded as witches, as well as mystical amulets and other mummified animals.

The museum will also be ‘guarded’ by a 19th-century ram horn, which is said to provide protection to the building and its contents.

Museum founder Ash Mills said that he wanted to share the history of Scotland’s witches after Nicola Sturgeon and the Scottish government publicly apologised to the thousands of women executed as witches under the Witchcraft Act of 1563.

“Putting aside Edinburgh being the birthplace of Harry Potter, Scotland actually already had a big history surrounding the fear of witchcraft,” Mills told Metro.

“It was one of the countries within Europe that witnessed persecution in mass numbers during the 17th-century witch craze.

“After over three years, both the Scottish Parliament and the Church of Scotland have made their apologies for those accused of being witches.

“I felt it was time to raise awareness of not only the witch craze but Scotland’s rich magical heritage.”


 



© Kazoo 5 Limited 2025