The area of Vöcklamarkt in Upper Austria…
May 1625 CE
The area of Vöcklamarkt in Upper Austria is a center of the peasant's wars of the seventeenth century.
When laity of Upper Austria offer some opposition to the Catholic priests installed in formerly Protestant parishes, Count Adam of Herberstorff, governor of Upper Austria and a dedicated agent of princely absolutism, summons the men of several parishes to Frankenfeld castle on the 15th of May, 1625, selects 36 of the Protestant rebels on the Haushamerfeld plain, and makes them roll dice for the lives.
Two out of the eighteen who lose are pardoned, but the rest are hanged.
Four are hanged on the spot, six on the spire of the church of Frankenburg, three on the church tower of Neukirchen, and the remaining three on the tower of the parish church in Vöcklamarkt.
Families that do not want to abandon their Protestant faith have to leave the country.