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 Post subject: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 10:23 am 
Between the 15th and 18th centuries there were a series of events that led to the murders of nearly 9 million souls. These were called the "Witch Trials" and are one of the darkest periods of all of human history.

It's important to note that the vast majority of people murdered professed to be Christian to the very end. Revelation 12 speaks of this:

Quote:
Revelation 12:17 - Then the dragon was enraged at the woman and went off to wage war against the rest of her offspring—those who keep God’s commands and hold fast their testimony about Jesus.


Now, if a Christian-hating witch is getting burned at the stake, you can be sure they are going to be trying to curse their captors before death. But the picture history gives us instead is a bunch of people who held fast to their testimony of Christ, even the point of being burnt alive. Surely, these martyrs have a lofty place in heaven.

Many have seen the Monty Python skit concerning witch hunts. While it is very funny it's also very accurate. In the Witch Trials the Christian priests would use a variety of methods in determining the secret and sinister identity of Christians among their ranks. One of these methods was searching for what was called a "diabolical mark" which usually was a mole of some kind. The priests supposedly had supernatural powers and could see a demonic mark from what looked like a common skin occurrence. If the accused didn't have any moles the priest would then use his powers to see an invisible mark which was then used to sentence death.

In reality all that was taking place is a culture attempting to survive. The RCC was trying to conquer the world and was using Christianity as a weapon of war. The Pagan customs of the day were a threat to the RCC, who claimed to have a perfect spiritual structure. They looked at the local animists and spiritualists as heathens and lesser than human. So they murdered them and justified it with their belief system. So much human lore was destroyed which then had to be pieced together over the next few centuries. Some was lost forever.

I don't believe that Christianity should conquer other religions. That's why I choose to practice Christianity in a universal way. However, this comes at a cost because the people who believe they have special powers still roam this world. Their once razor sharp teeth have been mostly dulled, but they still lurk about searching for diabolical marks. Like roaring lions seeking to devour someone, they cannot stop the hunt.

-Sab


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 10:54 am 
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Interesting thread. The witch-hunts of the seventeenth century are a particular interest of mine, Sab. I've done a lot of research and work on it. Coming as they did at a time when scientific, mathematical and philosophical thinking were advancing in huge strides, and with tremendous thinkers such as Isaac Newton, whose Principia Mathematica provided ground-breaking enlightenment and the basis for modern maths and science, and Elias Ashmole, the founder of the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, among many others, the witch-hunts provided a very surprising contrast to what might otherwise seem a very modern time.

The full horror of this hounding of women who were often just ordinary women who helped nurse the sick, has been brought home to me in two very telling ways. Firstly, Matthew hopkins, Witchfinder General, came from the same part of England as me and my historical studies naturally turned to him. What a wicked man! The Puritans sought out witches and would identify any woman who had even a mole on her skin as a proved witch because such a mark was where the demon familiar would suck!!!

A much more telling discovery happened to me fairly recently. On holiday in Iceland, we visited Thingvellir, the valley between two continental place which was the meeting place for Iceland's outdooor Parliament. In Thingvellir there is a river and a lake and a series of deep pools and waterfalls. In one deep pool, still on the surface but fed by river and fall, and surrpunded by a rock wall on one side and level grassy ground on the other, there is a plaque. On this site, witches were drowned over a period of about, from memory, seventy or eighty years or so from about 1640 or 50 or 60, to about 1720. That corresponds with the dates of the witchhunts in the main part of Europe, and with the Salem Witch trials in North America.

In modern times, we give the name wiitchhunt to any continual and concerted efforts at hounding an individual or individuals who in some way differ from the dominant group in any society, whether by a particular characteristic, or the holding of a different viewpoint. Very often, to those outside a situation, or viewing it afterwards, the whole phenomenon seems quite irrational and very hard to understand.


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 11:05 am 
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sabastious wrote:
Between the 15th and 18th centuries there were a series of events that led to the murders of nearly 9 million souls. These were called the "Witch Trials" and are one of the darkest periods of all of human history.

It's important to note that the vast majority of people murdered professed to be Christian to the very end. Revelation 12 speaks of this:

Quote:
Revelation 12:17 - Then the dragon was enraged at the woman and went off to wage war against the rest of her offspring—those who keep God’s commands and hold fast their testimony about Jesus.


Now, if a Christian-hating witch is getting burned at the stake, you can be sure they are going to be trying to curse their captors before death. But the picture history gives us instead is a bunch of people who held fast to their testimony of Christ, even the point of being burnt alive. Surely, these martyrs have a lofty place in heaven.

Many have seen the Monty Python skit concerning witch hunts. While it is very funny it's also very accurate. In the Witch Trials the Christian priests would use a variety of methods in determining the secret and sinister identity of Christians among their ranks. One of these methods was searching for what was called a "diabolical mark" which usually was a mole of some kind. The priests supposedly had supernatural powers and could see a demonic mark from what looked like a common skin occurrence. If the accused didn't have any moles the priest would then use his powers to see an invisible mark which was then used to sentence death.

In reality all that was taking place is a culture attempting to survive. The RCC was trying to conquer the world and was using Christianity as a weapon of war. The Pagan customs of the day were a threat to the RCC, who claimed to have a perfect spiritual structure. They looked at the local animists and spiritualists as heathens and lesser than human. So they murdered them and justified it with their belief system. So much human lore was destroyed which then had to be pieced together over the next few centuries. Some was lost forever.

I don't believe that Christianity should conquer other religions. That's why I choose to practice Christianity in a universal way. However, this comes at a cost because the people who believe they have special powers still roam this world. Their once razor sharp teeth have been mostly dulled, but they still lurk about searching for diabolical marks. Like roaring lions seeking to devour someone, they cannot stop the hunt.

-Sab



Sources ?


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 11:08 am 
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Which sources did you want, Paul? I thought this was all a matter of common knowledge. Bear with me, and I'll look some up for you. Sources on all this are all over the web, though.

I might have to dig to find the Iceland plaque though. Further details of the Icelandic side of things, and then history of their own witch persecution...because a witch hunt is an archetypal persecution... are in volumes on display in their excellent museum in Reykjavik.

Sorry, it never occurred to me that people wouldn't know about all this in detail.

PS, and first, I am going to make something to eat! You don't want me and those I cook for to fade away!


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 11:31 am 
Quote:
Sources ?


If I had a nickle for every time a theologian asked me for a source... as Char said it's common knowledge. Haven't you seen Monty Python and the Holy Grail? That's a good source.

-Sab


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 11:32 am 
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This is what I mean by sources:
http://www.summerlands.com/crossroads/r ... urrent.htm

The following table lists current estimates of the number of Witches killed in various countries during the Burning Times (1300-1800). "Recorded" executions are ones for which we have trial evidence. "Estimates" are the total number of deaths scholars believe occurred in these countries. Estimates are usually much higher than recorded deaths, because scholars compensate for lost records, unrecorded deaths, lynching, etc.

This table does not include all estimates of the death toll. Older and popular books often contain higher numbers because they're not based on solid evidence. (See "The Revolution of 1977-1981" and "The Impact of the New Evidence" for more on the problems with older estimates.) I've only presented current scholarly estimates, numbers that most experts today would find believable. Most of these numbers come from trial record counts.

The structure of this table is based on an unpublished article by Dr. Ronald Hutton, called "Counting the Witch Hunt." The essay is an invaluable road-map through the maze of Witch trial statistics. Dr. Hutton generously sent me a copy, for which I am most grateful.

**********************************


Witches Killed in the Burning Times

Country Recorded
Executions Estimated
Death Toll Note
America 36 35 - 37
Austria ?? 1,500 - 3,000
Belgium ?? 250
Bohemia ?? 1,000 - 2,000
Channel Islands 66 66 - 80
Denmark ?? 1,000
England 228 300 - 1,000
Estonia 65 100
Finland 115 115
France 775 5,000 - 6,000 (1)
Germany 8,188 17,324 - 26,000 (2)
Hungary 449 800
Iceland 22 22
Ireland 4 4 - 10
Italy 95 800 (3)
Latvia ?? 100
Luxembourg 358 355 - 358
Netherlands 203 203 - 238
Norway 280 350
Poland ??? 1,000 - 5,000 (4)
Portugal 7 7
Russia 10 10
Scotland 599 1,100 - 2,000
Spain 6 40 - 50
Sweden ?? 200 - 250
Switzerland 1,039 4,000 - 5,000 (5)
Grand Total: 12,545 35,184 - 63,850
Sources for these figures.

Notes:
1) No trial record counts have been done for Alsace, Brittany, Burgundy, Navarre, and Normandy, or for the Rhone region after 1500. Therefore the recorded execution figure is definitely far too low.

2) Again, the recorded executions figure is too low. There are no counts available for Bavaria, Brandenburg-Prussia, and Saxony. Moreover, while the Witch-crazes of north-central Germany are well-studied, the small trials in this region have not been counted.

One modern historian (Anne Llewellyn Barstow, in _Witchcraze_) estimated that 50,000 German Witches died. I have not included her estimate, for two reasons:

a) It is twice as large as all other current estimates; and
b) Her own evidence does not support this figure.

Barstow's estimated deaths for the various regions of Germany show a total of 25,419 for the entire country. This number is based on trial evidence, and is in line with other scholarly estimates. The 50,000 figure comes from an older work and is not based on solid evidence. In fact, it contradicts the rest of Barstow's data.

3) Recorded deaths are too low. We have no counts for the Duchy of Savoy (the area which appears to have been worst hit) or for the Alpine regions after 1500.

4) Polish Witch trials are currently being counted. Dr. Ronald Hutton of Bristol University says that preliminary reports suggest the death toll will be somewhere around 1,000.

Anne Llewellyn Barstow (_Witchcraze_) states that 15,000 Polish Witches died. This figure comes from an older work: _Procesy Czarownic w Polsce w XVII:XVIII Wieku_, by Bohdan Baranowski. There is no solid evidence to support this figure, and most modern scholars reject it.

5) Again, the recorded deaths are too low. Only the French-speaking cantons (approximately one quarter of the country) have been thoroughly studied.



And the above can't be used as "official sources" because they have NOT been independently verified.


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 11:42 am 
Paul, here's a source for the 9 million figure:

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Hutton, Ronald. Triumph of the Moon. p. 141.; (German) Behringer, Wolfgang: Neun Millionen Hexen. Enstehung, Tradition und Kritik eines populären Mythos, in: Geschichte in Wissenschaft und Unterricht 49. 1987, pp. 664–685, extensive summary on


Here's a good wiki page:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witch_trials_in_the_early_modern_period

-Sab


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 11:45 am 
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From that same article:
"
Quote:
Nine million women" [edit]
A figure of nine million victims (or "nine million women" killed) in the European witch-hunts is an influential popular myth in 20th-century feminism and neopaganism. The nine million figure is ultimately due to Gottfried Christian Voigt. The history of this estimate was researched by Behringer (1998).[118]
Voigt published it in a 1784 article, writing in the context of the Age of Enlightenment, wishing to emphasize the importance of education in rooting out superstition and a relapse into the witch-craze which had subsided less than a lifetime ago in his day. He was criticizing Voltaire's estimate of "several hundred thousand" as too low. Voigt based his estimate on twenty cases recorded over fifty years in the archives Quedlinburg, Germany. Based on records of the 29 year period 1569 to 1589, he estimated about 40 executions in this period, and extrapolated to about 133 executions per century.[119] Voigt then extrapolated this number to the entire population of Europe, arriving at "858,454 per century" and for an assumed 11 centuries of witch-hunts at "9,442,994 people" in total.[120] Voigt's number was rounded off to nine million by Gustav Roskoff in his 1869 Geschichte des Teufels ("History of the Devil"). It was subsequently repeated by various German and English historians, notably the 19th-century women's rights campaigner Matilda Joslyn Gage[121][122] by Margaret Murray (1921), and notoriously in Nazi propaganda, which in the 1930s used witches as a symbol of northern völkisch culture, as opposed to Mediterranean or "Semitic" Christianity. The 1935 Der christliche Hexenwahn ("The Christian Witch Craze") claimed that the witch-hunts were a Christian, and thus ultimately Jewish, attempt to exterminate "Aryan womanhood". The survey of judicial records taken by Himmler's Hexen-Sonderkommando within the SS has proven useful for modern estimates of the number of victims.[123] Mathilde Ludendorff in her 1934 Christliche Grausamkeit an Deutschen Frauen ("Christian cruelty against German women") also repeated the figure of nine million victims.[124]
Voigt's and Roskoff's nine million figure is too high by a factor of at least 100 according to modern estimates, but it has kept on being repeated throughout the second half of the 20th century, by Gerald Gardner (1954) and subsequently in Gardnerian Wicca and second wave feminism, as late as in the 1990 The Burning Times film and the lyrics of the 2005 Burning Times album by Christy Moore.
Curiously, not only the nine million estimate of Voigt's has proven influential, but his estimate of "133 Quedlinburg executions per century" also has an involved history, appearing as the claim that 133 witches being burnt in the year 1589 alone in Geschichte der Hexenprozesse (1880, revised 1910), and even as a mass-execution of 133 witches on a single day in Quedlinburg in Gustav Roskoff, Geschichte des Teufels (1869, p. 304). Reference to this supposed mass-execution as factual was made as late as 2006 in the third edition of Brian P. Levack's The Witch Hunt in Modern Europe (p. 24). Reference to an alleged execution of 133 witches in Osnabrück as factual appears as late as 2007 in John Michael Cooper, Mendelssohn, Goethe, and the Walpurgis night: the heathen muse in European culture, 1700–1850 (p. 15).[125]
Apparently, Voigt's estimate of the "average number of executions per century in Quedlinburg" happened to coincide with the number of victims in a spurious report of a singular mass execution in a single day in Osnabrück distributed in the late 1580s. References to this supposed mass execution as factual is also found in 19th-century literature, sometimes together with the claim that the four prettiest of those condemned were lifted out of the flames and carried away through the air before they were burned.[126] Finally, Roskoff (1869) seems to have mixed up "133 executions on a day in Osnabrück" with "133 executions per century in Quedlinburg" to arrive at "133 executions on a day in Quedlinburg". The Osnabrück report seems to originate with a flyer first distributed in 1588, claiming an execution of 133 witches on a single day in "this year". The flyer was later reprinted, in 1589 and during the 1590s, with the reported event always kept as occurring in "this year". This sensationalist headline perhaps reflects the historical mass execution in Osnabrück of 121 witches during the summer of 1583 (in the course of about five months, not on a single day), the highest number of executions by far recorded for any year in this city (Pohl 1990)[127]


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 11:46 am 
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RE: Hutton:
Quote:
Ronald Hutton, in his unpublished essay "Counting the Witch Hunt", counted local estimates, and in areas where estimates were unavailable attempted to extrapolate from nearby regions with similar demographics and attitudes towards witch hunting. He reached an estimate of 40,000 total executions. Table of recorded and estimated executions according to Hutton's estimates[68]


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 11:48 am 
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The witch hunts were a horrific event BUT inflating their numbers does a grave injustice to those that suffered during those times, as if the number is what matters and not the fact that IT HAPPENED and must NEVER happen again.


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 11:52 am 
PSacramento wrote:
The witch hunts were a horrific event BUT inflating their numbers does a grave injustice to those that suffered during those times, as if the number is what matters and not the fact that IT HAPPENED and must NEVER happen again.


Yes, the 9 million figure is wrong. I misread that article it would seem. I would say that the number is impossible to determine and must have been quite a few. The point is that it was merely a cultural cleansing justified by a system of belief. It accurately shows the extent that power can corrupt.

-Sab


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 11:56 am 
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sabastious wrote:
PSacramento wrote:
The witch hunts were a horrific event BUT inflating their numbers does a grave injustice to those that suffered during those times, as if the number is what matters and not the fact that IT HAPPENED and must NEVER happen again.


Yes, the 9 million figure is wrong. I misread that article it would seem. I would say that the number is impossible to determine and must have been quite a few. The point is that it was merely a cultural cleansing justified by a system of belief. It accurately shows the extent that power can corrupt.

-Sab


Agreed, 100%.
The more power people have the more corrupt they become.
The Church hierarchy is a prime example of that, any religious hierarchy for that matter.
The zeal that some people have for religion is a very dangerous thing, for any ideology really.


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 12:09 pm 
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_Hopkins


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/ ... ed-up.html


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witch-hunt


http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/f ... story.html

This one above was quite an interesting find as it gives some chronology.

http://womenshistory.about.com/od/witch ... meline.htm

http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/2 ... 2263587517

Salem Witch Trials

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-a ... salem.html

http://faculty.history.wisc.edu/sommerv ... 67-131.htm

Now Iceland and Thingvellir

http://www.nat.is/travelguideeng/icelan ... enghtm.htm

This nice page below has pictures of Thingvellir and the pool. I remember clearly reading there about the drowning e, but it seems they were also burned. The page also mentions the display in their wonderful museum.

http://icelandreview.com/icelandreview/ ... _id=366760

Would you like some more links, anyone? The web abounds in them. This is widespread general knowledge. In addition, as a historian and history teacher, I have books on my shelves and have taught generations about it.

I still want to emphasise how dissonant all this is with the otherwise prevailing culture of acquisition of knowledge and scientific and mathematical learning. It's also the time when Protestant thinking became more articulate and entrenched in the mainstream in some countries.

It's also interesting that although in mediaeval times the Catholic Church had been the agent of burnings, the paranoid seeking out of witches in England was done under Oliver Cromwell, the Puritan leader in the English Civil War, and it was subsequent Puritans in Britain and Europe and America who began the sequence of hounding of women as witches on the slightest pretext.

Some of you will know Arthur Miller's famous play The Crucible in which the poor innocent women of Salem were pu to such a terrible trial. If you can, get to read it or see it. An excellent and powerful film was made in 1996. I've seen it several times.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Crucible

In modern times the term witch hunt is widely used for any seeking out, pointing out or hounding of an individual or group whose thinking is not in accord with the dominant group, whether in society in general, or in a community or group, large or very small.


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 12:15 pm 
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http://departments.kings.edu/womens_his ... error.html

Common errors about the Witch Hunts:
#1. The Witch Hunts were an example of medieval cruelty and barbarism.

#2. The Church was to blame for the Witch Hunts.

#3. The Witch Hunts specifically targeted women.

#4. The Witch Hunts were an attempt at "femicide" or "gendercide," meaning the persecution of the female sex, equivalent to genocide.

#5. The Witch Hunts were all alike.

#6. Millions of people died because of the Witch Hunts.

#7. People condemned during the Witch Hunts were burned at the stake.

#8. During the time of the Witch Hunts, witches actually existed and worked magic.

#9. In modern usage, the term "Witch Hunt" can be applied to any persecution of a group of people.

#10. Modern witchcraft/magick/wicca is a direct descendent of those practices done by people during the Witch Hunts of 1400-1800.


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 Post subject: Re: What IS a witchhunt?
PostPosted: Thu May 09, 2013 12:17 pm 
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A timeline:
http://www.religioustolerance.org/wic_burn2.htm

The Witchhunt timeline:

Prior to the 9th century CE: There was a widespread popular belief that evil Witches existed. They were seen as evil persons, primarily women, who devoted their lives to harming and killing others through black magic and evil sorcery. The Catholic church at the time officially taught that such Witches did not exist. It was a heresy to say that they were real. "For example, the 5th century Synod of St. Patrick ruled that 'A Christian who believes that there is a vampire in the world, that is to say, a witch, is to be anathematized; whoever lays that reputation upon a living being shall not be received into the Church until he revokes with his own voice the crime that he has committed.' A capitulary from Saxony (775-790 CE) blamed these stereotypes on pagan belief systems: 'If anyone, deceived by the Devil, believes after the manner of the Pagans that any man or woman is a witch and eats men, and if on this account he burns [the alleged witch]... he shall be punished by capital sentence." 1

906 CE: Regino of Prum, the Abbot of Treves, wote the Canon Episcopi. It reinforced the church's teaching that Witches did not exist. It admitted that some confused and deluded women thought that they flew through the air with the Pagan Goddess Diana. But this did not happen in reality; it was explained away as some form of hallucination.

Circa 975 CE: Penalties for Witchcraft and the use of healing magic were relatively mild. The English Confessional of Egbert said, in part: "If a woman works witchcraft and enchantment and [uses] magical philters, she shall fast for twelve months...If she kills anyone by her philters, she shall fast for seven years." Fasting, in this case, involved consuming only bread and water.

circa 1140: Gratian, an Italian monk, incorporated the Canon Episcopi into canon law.

circa 1203: The Cathar movement, a Gnostic Christian group, had become popular in the Orleans area of France and in Italy. They were declared heretics. Pope Innocent III approved a war of genocide against the Cathars. The last known Cathar was burned at the stake in 1321 CE. The faith has seen a rebirth in recent years.

1227: Pope Gregory IX established the Inquisitional Courts to arrest, try, convict and execute heretics.

1252: Pope Innocent IV wrote a papal bull titled "Ad exstirpanda" which authorized the use of torture during inquisitional trials. This greatly increased the conviction rate.

1258: Pope Alexander IV instructed the Inquisition to confine their investigations to cases of heresy. They were to not investigate charges of divination or sorcery unless heresy was also involved.

1265: Pope Clement IV reaffirms the use of torture.

1326: The Church authorized the Inquisition to investigate Witchcraft and to develop "demonology." This is the theory of the diabolic origin of Witchcraft. 1

1330: The popular concept of Witches as evil sorcerers is expanded to include belief that they swore allegiance to Satan, had sexual relations with the Devil, kidnapped and ate children, etc. Some religious conservatives still believe this today.

1347 to 1349: The Black Death epidemic killed a sizeable part of the European population. Conspiracy theories spread. Lepers, Jews, Muslims and Witches were accused of poisoning wells and spreading disease.

1430's: Christian theologians started to write articles and books which "proved" the existence of Witches. 2

1436-7: Johannes (John) Nider wrote a book called Formicarius, which describe the prosecution of a man for Witchcraft. Copies of this book were often added to the Malleus Maleficarum in later years. Some sources say that the author Thomas of Brabant; this is apparently an error.

1450: The first major witch hunts began in many western European countries. The Roman Catholic Church created an imaginary evil religion, using stereotypes that had circulated since pre-Christian times. They said that Pagans who worshiped Diana and other Gods and Goddesses were evil Witches who kidnapped babies, killed and ate their victims, sold their soul to Satan, were in league with demons, flew through the air, met in the middle of the night, caused male impotence and infertility, caused male genitals to disappear, etc. Historians have speculated that this religiously inspired genocide was motivated by a desire by the Church to attain a complete religious monopoly, or was "a tool of repression, a form of reining-in deviant behavior, a backlash against women, or a tool of the common people to name scapegoats for spoiled crops, dead livestock or the death of babies and children." Walter Stephens, a professor of Italian studies at Johns Hopkins University, proposes a new theory: "I think Witches were a scapegoat for God." 3 Religious leaders felt that they had to retain the concepts of both an omnipotent and an all-loving deity. Thus, they had to invent Witches and demons in order to explain the existence of evil in the world. This debate, about how an all-good and all-powerful God can coexist in the world with evil is now called Theodicy. Debate continues to the present day.

1450: Johann Gutenberg invented moveable type which made mass printing possible. This enabled the wide distribution of Papal bulls and books on Witch persecution; the witch hunt was greatly facilitated.

1484: Pope Innocent VIII issued a papal bull "Summis desiderantes" on DEC-5 which promoted the tracking down, torturing and executing of Satan worshipers.

1486-1487: Institoris (Heinrich Kraemer) and Jacob Sprenger published the Malleus Maleficarum (The Witches' Hammer). It is a fascinating study of the authors' misogyny and sexual frustration. It describes the activities of Witches, the methods of extracting confessions. It was later abandoned by the Church, but became the "bible" of those secular courts which tried Witches.

1500: During the 14th century, there had been known 38 trials against Witches and sorcerers in England, 95 in France and 80 in Germany. 4 The witch hunts accelerated. "By choosing to give their souls over to the devil witches had committed crimes against man and against God. The gravity of this double crime classified witchcraft as crimen exceptum, and allowed for the suspension of normal rules of evidence in order to punish the guilty." 7 Children's testimony was accepted. Essentially unlimited torture was applied to obtain confessions. The flimsiest circumstantial evidence was accepted as proof of guilt.

1517: Martin Luther is commonly believed to have nailed his 95 theses on the cathedral door at Wittenburg, Germany. Apparently it never happened; he published his arguments in a less dramatic way. This triggered the Protestant Reformation. In Roman Catholic countries, the courts continue to burn witches. In Protestant lands, they were mainly hung. Some Protestant countries did not allow torture. In England, this lack of torture led to a low conviction rate of only 19%. 4


Circa 1550 to 1650 CE: Trials and executions reached a peak during these ten decades, which are often referred to as the "burning times." They were mostly concentrated in eastern France, Germany and Switzerland. Witch persecutions often occurred in areas where Catholics and Protestants were fighting. Contrary to public opinion, suspected witches -- particularly those involved in evil sorcery -- were mainly tried by secular courts. A minority were charged by church authorities; these were often cases involving the use of healing magic or midwifery. 1

1563: Johann Weyer (b. 1515) published a book which was critical of the Witch trials. Called "De Praestigiis Daemonum" (Shipwreck of souls), it argued that Witches did not really exist, but that Satan promoted the belief that they did. He rejected confessions obtained through torture as worthless. He recommended medical treatment instead of torture and execution. By publishing the book anonymously, he escaped the stake. 8

1580: Jean Bodin wrote "De la Demonomanie des Sorciers" (Of the punishments deserved by Witches). He stated that the punishment of Witches was required, both for the security of the state and to appease the wrath of God. No accused Witch should be set free if there is even a scrap of evidence that she might be guilty. If prosecutors waited for solid evidence, he felt that not one Witch in a million would be punished.

1584: Reginald Scot published a book that was ahead of its time. In Discoverie of Witchcraft, he claimed that supernatural powers did not exist. Thus, there were no Witches.

1608: Francesco Maria Guazzo published the "Compendium Maleficarum." It discusses Witches' pacts with Satan, the magic that Witches use to harm others, etc.

circa 1609: A witch panic hit the Basque areas of Spain. La Suprema, the governing body of the Inquisition, recognized it as a hoax and issued an Edict of Silence which prohibited discussion of witchcraft. The panic quickly died down.

1610: Execution of Witches in the Netherlands ceased, probably because of Weyer's 1563 book.

1616: A second witch craze broke out in Vizcaya. Again an Edict of Silence was issued by the Inquisition. But the king overturned the Edict and 300 accused witches were burned alive.

1631: Friedrich Spee von Langenfield, a Jesuit priest, wrote "Cautio criminalis" (Circumspection in Criminal Cases). He condemned the witch hunts and persecution in Wurzburg, Germany. He wrote that the accused confessed only because they were the victims of sadistic tortures.

1684: The last accused Witch was executed in England.

1690's: Nearly 25 people died during the witch craze in Salem, MA: one was pressed to death with weights because he wouldn't enter a plea; some died in prison, the rest were hanged. 5 There were other trials and executions throughout New England.
1745: France stopped the execution of Witches.

1775: Germany stopped the execution of Witches.

1782: Switzerland stopped the execution of Witches.

1792: Poland executed the last person in Europe who had been tried and convicted of Witchcraft. A few isolated extra-legal lynchings of Witches continued in Europe and North America into the 20th century.

1830's: The church ceased the execution of Witches in South America.

1980: Dr. Lawrence Pazder (1936 - 2004) and Michelle Smith wrote "Michelle Remembers." The concept of humans in league with Satan, which had been largely dormant for decades, was revived. Although the book has been shown to be a work of fiction, it is presented as factual, based on Michelle's recovered memories. 6 This book was largely responsible for triggering a new Witch/Satanist/Satanic Ritual Abuse (SRA) panic in the U.S. and Canada.

1980 to 1995: Two types of trials were held in North America, which repeated many of the same features of earlier Witch trials:
Staff at some pre-schools, day care facilities and Sunday schools were accused of ritual abuse of children. Evidence was based on faulty medical diagnoses and memories of non-existent abuse implanted in the minds of very young children.

Tens of thousands of adults, victimized by Recovered Memory Therapy, developed false memories of having been abused during childhood. In about 17% of the cases, these memories escalated to recollections of Satanic Ritual Abuse. Hundreds of parents were charged with criminal acts. Almost all of them were innocent. Most of the charges involved acts that never actually happened.

Sanity has since prevailed. Most of the accused have been released from jail. Those held in the state of Massachusetts were among the last to be released.

1990's: Some conservative Christian pastors continue to link two unrelated belief systems:
The imaginary religion of Satan-worshiping Witches promoted by the Church during the Renaissance, and

Wicca and other Neopagan religions which are nature-based faiths and which do not recognize the existence of the Christian devil.

1994 to 1996: Several hundred people were accused of witchcraft in the Northern Province of South Africa, and were lynched by frightened mobs. 8

1999: Conservative Christian pastors occasionally call for a renewal of the burning times, to exterminate Wiccans and other Neopagans. One example shows the intensity of misinformation and hatred that fear of Witches can continue to generate in modern times. In 1999-AUG, Rev. Jack Harvey, pastor of Tabernacle Independent Baptist Church in Killeen, TX allegedly arranged for at least one member of his church to carry a handgun during religious services, "in case a warlock tries to grab one of our kids...I've heard they drink blood, eat babies. They have fires, they probably cook them..." During speeches which preceded his church's demonstration against Wiccans, Rev. Harvey allegedly stated that the U.S. Army should napalm Witches. One of the Christian's signs read "Witchcraft is an abomination" on one side and "Burn the witches off Ft. Hood" on the other. 9 (Ft. Hood is a large army base near Killeen TX. A Wiccan faith group is active there.)


21st Century: Due to a number of factors, including:

The collapse of the Satanic Ritual Abuse hoax of the 1980's to 1995.
The broadcast of many accurate TV documentaries about Wicca and other Neopagan religions.
Many Wiccans going public with their religious faith
the fear of Witches, Wiccans and other Neopagans has largely evaporated.


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