For years a group of Hungarian women used arsenic to poison husbands, elderly relatives, and other nuisances
A small village in central Hungary called Nagyrev was visited by a strange woman in 1911. Presenting herself as a midwife, the woman went to work in the village. She was married, but her husband didn’t accompany her, nor did he ever appear in Nagyrev. The woman never properly explained his absence.
She went by the name of Júlia Fazekas; however, it seems that she borrowed the name of her absent husband, Julius. The question of her real identity, as well as her past, remain a mystery to this day.
Fazekas earned a reputation for performing abortions, conducting operations on pregnant women despite the fact that the procedure wasn’t legal at the time. She was summoned to court and imprisoned 10 times for her actions, but was always acquitted by judges who turned a blind eye, due to the dire financial situation in the rural areas of Austro-Hungary, just a few years prior to the First World War.
Unwanted pregnancy didn’t fit into to the Hungarian custom of arranged marriages, and divorce was not allowed among the traditionally Catholic population. It has to be said that, although a lot of arranged marriages led to a comfortable and happy domestic life, there were cases in which a husband was in some way abusive, and the wife had to endure it. Continued next post.