Maria Swanenburg
Maria Swanenburg | |
---|---|
Born | Maria Catherina Swanenburg 9 September 1839 Leiden, Netherlands |
Died | 11 April 1915 Gorinchem, Netherlands | (aged 75)
Other names | "Goeie Mie" |
Criminal details | |
Motive | Life insurance payout |
Method | Arsenic poisoning |
Victims | 27 confirmed, more than 90 suspected |
Crime span | 1880–1883 |
Apprehended | December 1883 |
Conviction | Murder (three counts) |
Sentence | Life imprisonment |
Maria Catherina van der Linden-Swanenburg (9 September 1839 – 11 April 1915) was a Dutch serial killer who murdered at least 27 people and was suspected of killing more than 90 people.
Early life
Maria Swanenburg was the daughter of Clemens Swanenburg and Johanna Dingjan. After Swanenburg's first two daughters died at a young age, she married Johannes van der Linden on 13 May 1868. The result of this marriage was five sons and two daughters. The marriage lasted until 29 January 1886.[1]
Her nickname was "Goeie Mie" ("Good Mie"), bestowed because of her amiable, neighborly assistance with babysitting and taking care of the poor, sick, and elderly in Leiden, where she herself lived.[2][3]
Murders
Her first victim was her mother Johanna, in 1880; not long thereafter, she poisoned her father, Clemens.
It was established [by whom?] with certainty that Swanenburg poisoned at least 102 people with arsenic between 1880 and 1883. Twenty-seven of her victims died,[4] of whom 16 were her relatives.[5] The investigation included more than 90 suspicious deaths.[citation needed] 45 survivors sustained chronic health issues after having ingested the poison.[citation needed]
Swanenburg's motive was the payout of her victims' insurance or their inheritance. She had secured most of the insurance policies herself.[6]
Capture and imprisonment
Swanenburg was caught after she poisoned the Frankhuizen family in December 1883.[7] Her trial began on 23 April 1885.[8] Swanenburg was found guilty of having killed at least three victims, and she was sentenced to life imprisonment in a correctional facility, where she died in 1915. [9]
See also
References
Footnotes
- ^ Moerman 2013, § 1.
- ^ Rasovich 1995, § 17.
- ^ Weterings 2019, § 3.
- ^ Rasovich 1995, § 8.
- ^ Rasovich 1995, § 9.
- ^ Weterings 2019, § 4.
- ^ Weterings 2019, § 5.
- ^ Moerman 2013, § 3.
- ^ Weterings 2019, § 8.
Bibliography
- Moerman, I. W. L. (2013). "Swanenburg, Maria Catharina (1839–1915)". Biografisch Woordenboek van Nederland (in Dutch). Amsterdam: Huygens ING.
- Rasovich, M.; Van Willigenburg, H. (25 August 1995). "Goeie Mie: de grootste gifmengster aller tijden". de Volkskrant (in Dutch). Retrieved 29 April 2019.
- Weterings, V. (2019). "Swanenburg, Maria Catharina (1839–1915)". Digitaal Vrouwenlexicon van Nederland (in Dutch). Amsterdam: Huygens ING.
- 1839 births
- 1880 murders in Europe
- 1883 murders in Europe
- 1915 deaths
- 19th-century Dutch criminals
- Dutch female murderers
- Dutch serial killers
- Dutch people convicted of murder
- Dutch people who died in prison custody
- Dutch prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment
- Female serial killers
- Matricides
- Patricides
- People convicted of murder by the Netherlands
- People from Leiden
- Poisoners
- Prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment by the Netherlands
- Prisoners who died in Dutch detention
- Serial killers who died in prison custody
- Crime biography stubs
- Dutch people stubs