The only comprehensive, single-volume survey of magic available, this compelling book traces the history of magic, witchcraft, and superstitious practices such as popular spells or charms from antiquity to the present day. Focusing especially on Europe in the medieval and early modern eras, Michael Bailey also explores the ancient Near East, classical Greece and Rome, and the spread of magical systems_particularly modern witchcraft or Wicca_from Europe to the United States. He examines how magic and superstition have been defined in various historical eras and how these constructions have changed over time. He considers the ways in which specific categories of magic have been condemned, and how those identified as magicians or witches have been persecuted and prosecuted in various societies. Although conceptions of magic have changed over time, the author shows how magic has almost always served as a boundary marker separating socially acceptable actions from illicit ones, and more generally the known and understood from the unknown and occult.
This collection is an invaluable toolkit for students of early modern Europe, providing both a focused overview and a springboard for broader thinking about the underlying continuities and discontinuities that make the study of magic and ...
See generally Barnett, Enlightenment and Religion; David Sorkin, The Religious Enlightenment: Protestants, Jews, and Catholics from London to Vienna (Princeton, N.J., 2008). My phrase comes from Clark, Thinking with Demons, ...
Meg F. Pearson From its first production, Thomas Heywood and Richard Brome's The Late Lancashire Witches offered alternatives to the standard readings and shows of a witch play. Contemporary witch plays typically erred on the side of ...
Dopo alcuni giorni questi medesimi fecero venire due da Napoli, uno di questi era Monaco, et un altro secolare. Questi vennero nella predetta cantina, et il secolaro cavò fuori una cordella co' un peso attaccato, entesa la cordella col ...
The book discusses the extent and nature of witchcraft accusations in the period and provides a general survey of the published work on the subject for an English audience.
This volume charts the processes and reasons for the decriminalisation of witchcraft but also challenges the widespread assumption that Europe has been 'disenchanted'.
This book presents twenty chapters by experts in their fields, providing a thorough and interdisciplinary overview of the theory and practice of magic in the West.
Enchanted Europe is the first comprehensive, integrated account of western Europe's long, complex dialogue with its own folklore and popular beliefs.
For example, the extensive medical casebooks of the Elizabethan practitioner Simon Forman (1552–1611) and his protégé Richard Napier (1559–1634) reveal how they used astrology to diagnose and cure many wealthy and well-connected ...
... The Miraculous Conformist , 4. In calling Greatrakes a " conformist , " Stubbe was making it clear that he was not a divinely inspired " Enthusiast . " 31. " Wen , " a cyst containing sebaceous matter . 32. Stubbe , The Miraclulous ...