By charging Claire with MPC, Tom Christie (and the corrupt Committee of Safety) bypass any need for a fair trial. They don’t have to prove Claire cut Malva’s throat. They only have to convince a superstitious jury that Claire used dark magic to murder a pregnant woman and sacrifice the child. Given the recent plague of ether-induced strange behavior, the malformed stillborn baby, and the lingering distrust of Claire’s medical “sorcery,” the community is primed to believe it.
The episode brilliantly highlights the helplessness of logic against mob fear. Jamie rages, Roger searches for legal loopholes, but the charge of MPC transforms Claire from a healer into a folk devil overnight. Outlander creator Diana Gabaldon didn’t invent this charge. The term Maleficium was the standard legal classification for harmful magic in European and colonial American witch trials. Unlike Sortilege (simple divination or fortune-telling), Maleficium required proof of harm to a person or property—a standard that was almost impossible to disprove once an accuser named a victim. outlander s06e06 mpc
Memorable line: “They’re not trying a murderer. They’re burning a witch.” – Jamie Fraser By charging Claire with MPC, Tom Christie (and
For viewers unfamiliar with 18th-century legal jargon or those who missed a crucial line of dialogue, here’s a deep dive into what MPC means, why it matters, and how it sets up a terrifying new reality for Claire and Jamie Fraser. In the context of Outlander S06E06, MPC stands for Malum Per Se (or sometimes cited in shorthand as “Malum in Se” – a crime that is evil in itself). However, the specific charge leveled against Claire Fraser is rooted in the accusation of Maleficium — the practice of malicious witchcraft or harmful magic. Given the recent plague of ether-induced strange behavior,
The show uses “MPC” as a period-accurate docket notation for a capital crime of supernatural malevolence. In short: