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9780415195065

The Witchcraft Sourcebook

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780415195065

  • ISBN10:

    0415195063

  • Format: Nonspecific Binding
  • Copyright: 2003-12-02
  • Publisher: Routledge
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Summary

More than 100,000 people - mainly women - have been prosecuted for the crime of witchcraft between 1450 and 1750 in Europe and colonial America. During the early modern period, the prominent stereotype of the witch as an evil magician and servant of Satan emerged. This collection of trial records, laws, treatises, sermons, speeches, woodcuts, paintings and literary texts illustrates how contemporaries from various periods have perceived alleged witches and their activities. Brian Levack reveals how notions of witchcraft and its visual depiction changed over time. He looks at the connections between gender and witchcraft and the nature of the witch's perceived power. This anthology provides students of the history of witchcraft with a broad range of sources and learned commentary and background by one of the leading scholars of the field.

Table of Contents

List of illustrations ix
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1(4)
PART I Witchcraft and magic in the Ancient World 5(26)
1 The witch of Endor
7(3)
2 A sorcery trial in the second century CE
10(4)
3 Curse tablets against Roman charioteers
14(2)
4 Apuleius: the power of witches
16(6)
5 Horace: Canidia as a witch figure
22(3)
6 Love magic in antiquity
25(2)
7 St Augustine: demonic power in early Christianity
27(4)
PART II The medieval foundations of witch-hunting 31(38)
8 Canon law and witchcraft
33(3)
9 St Thomas Aquinas: scholasticism and magic
36(3)
10 The trial of Dame Alice Kyteler, 1324
39(4)
11 Nicholas Eymeric: magic and heresy, 1376
43(4)
12 The University of Paris: a condemnation of magic, 1398
47(5)
13 Johannes Nider: an early description of the witches' sabbath, 1435
52(5)
14 Heinrich Kramer: Malleus maleficarum, 1486
57(12)
PART III Witch beliefs in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries 69(48)
15 Lambert Daneau: Protestantism and witchcraft, 1574
71(6)
16 Henri Boguet: the threat of witchcraft, 1602
77(5)
17 Nicolas Remy: the Devil's mark and flight to the sabbath, 1595
82(6)
18 Martin Del Rio: the maleficia of witches, 1600
88(6)
19 William Perkins: good and bad witches, 1608
94(5)
20 Francesco Maria Guazzo: the pact with the Devil, 1608
99(5)
21 Pierre de Lancre: dancing and sex at the sabbath, 1612
104(6)
22 Cotton Mather: the apocalypse and witchcraft, 1692
110(3)
23 James Hutchinson: children, the covenant, and witchcraft, 1697
113(4)
PART IV The trial and punishment of witches 117(56)
24 Innocent VIII: papal inquisitors and witchcraft, 1484
119(4)
25 Heinrich Kramer: the torture of accused witches, 1486
123(5)
26 Jean Bodin: witchcraft as an excepted crime, 1580
128(7)
27 Henri Boguet: the conduct of a witchcraft judge, 1602
135(5)
28 King James VI: the swimming and pricking of witches, 1597
140(5)
29 Friedrich Spee: a condemnation of torture, 1631
145(9)
30 Sir Robert Filmer: the discovery of witches, 1652
154(4)
31 Sir George Mackenzie: judicial caution in the trial of witches, 1678
158(5)
32 King Louis XIV of France: the decriminalization of French witchcraft, 1682
163(4)
33 Christian Thomasius: the prohibition of torture, 1705
167(4)
34 The repeal of the English and Scottish witchcraft statutes, 1736
171(2)
PART V Witchcraft trials in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries 173(58)
35 The confession of Niclas Fiedler at Trier, 1591
175(4)
36 The trial of Françatte Camont in Lorraine, 1598
179(6)
37 The confessions of witches in Guernsey, 1617
185(5)
38 The trial and confession of Elizabeth Sawyer, 1621
190(8)
39 The confessions of Johannes Junius at Bamberg, 1628
198(5)
40 The witch-hunt at Eichstätt, 1637
203(7)
41 The trial of Janet Barker and Margaret Lauder at Edinburgh, 1643
210(4)
42 A Russian witch-trial at Lukh, 1657
214(6)
43 The Salem witchcraft trials, 1692
220(11)
PART VI Demonic possession and witchcraft 231(44)
44 Johann Weyer: the possession of the nuns at Wertet, 1550
235(4)
45 Henri Boguet: the possession of Loyse Maillat, 1598
239(4)
46 The possession of Marthe Brossier, 1599
243(6)
47 Edward Jorden: demonic possession and disease, 1603
249(3)
48 The possessions at Loudun, 1634
252(9)
49 Cotton Mather: the possession of the Goodwin children, 1688
261(5)
50 The possession of Christian Shaw, 1697
266(9)
PART VII The skeptical tradition 275(44)
51 Johann Weyer: witches as melancholics, 1563
277(8)
52 Reginald Scot: the unreality of witchcraft, 1584
285(8)
53 Alonso de Salazar Frias: the unreliability of confessions, 1612
293(6)
54 Thomas Hobbes: the nature of demons, 1651
299(6)
55 Baruch Spinoza: the non-existence of the Devil, 1661, 1675
305(2)
56 John Webster: witchcraft and the occult, 1677
307(6)
57 Balthasar Bekker: the disenchantment of the world, 1695
313(6)
PART VIII Dramatic representations of witchcraft 319(26)
58 Seneca: the witch in classical drama
321(4)
59 Fernando de Rojas: the witch figure in the Renaissance, 1499
325(4)
60 Thomas Middleton: the witch in English drama, 1613
329(6)
61 Hans Wiers-Jenssen: a Norwegian witchcraft drama, 1917
335(10)
Index 345

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