This article enhances our understanding of the development and dynamism of early modern witch stereotypes by focusing on the stereotype of the witch-cleric, the Christian minister imagined by early modern people as working for the devil instead of God, baptizing people into witchcraft, working harmful magic and even officiating at witches’ gatherings. I show how this stereotype first developed in relation to Catholic clerics in demonology, print culture and witch-trials, then examine its emergence in relation to Protestant clerics in Germany and beyond, using case studies of pastors from the Lutheran territory of Rothenburg ob der Tauber from 1639 and 1692 to explore these ideas in detail. I also offer a broader comparison of beliefs about ...
Given the widespread belief in witchcraft and the existence of laws against such practices, why did ...
The witch hysteria that overtook Christian Europe during the Early Modern era inspired a mass parano...
Analyses concerning the gender of the witches in Europe in the 15th-18th centuries show an unanimous...
In 1692 a woman named Barbara Ehness was awaiting execution for attempted murder by poison in the Lu...
This work is a monograph on filling the Polish publishing gap in the subject of the early-modern ste...
By the end of the fifteenth century, demonological beliefs were well established by demonologists, i...
Imagining the Witch explores emotions, gender, and selfhood through the lens of witch-trials in earl...
PhD ThesisThis study has examined the way in which the Reformation and Counter Reformation influenc...
This article aims to contribute to the emerging cultural study of early modern witchcraft by examini...
In 1610s, the province of Östergötland would become the scene of the first large-scale witch-hunts i...
This article examines what ‘gender’ meant and how it shaped and constituted experience for men and w...
About half of all the women and men ever executed for witchcraft were German. Friedrich Spee, the gr...
The attempt here is to understand the social conditions and processes through which witches were lab...
This paper examines the dynamics of witchcraft trials in the Lorraine through a selection of late si...
This article focuses on the trial of Margaretha Horn, a sixty-two year old peasant woman arrested fo...
Given the widespread belief in witchcraft and the existence of laws against such practices, why did ...
The witch hysteria that overtook Christian Europe during the Early Modern era inspired a mass parano...
Analyses concerning the gender of the witches in Europe in the 15th-18th centuries show an unanimous...
In 1692 a woman named Barbara Ehness was awaiting execution for attempted murder by poison in the Lu...
This work is a monograph on filling the Polish publishing gap in the subject of the early-modern ste...
By the end of the fifteenth century, demonological beliefs were well established by demonologists, i...
Imagining the Witch explores emotions, gender, and selfhood through the lens of witch-trials in earl...
PhD ThesisThis study has examined the way in which the Reformation and Counter Reformation influenc...
This article aims to contribute to the emerging cultural study of early modern witchcraft by examini...
In 1610s, the province of Östergötland would become the scene of the first large-scale witch-hunts i...
This article examines what ‘gender’ meant and how it shaped and constituted experience for men and w...
About half of all the women and men ever executed for witchcraft were German. Friedrich Spee, the gr...
The attempt here is to understand the social conditions and processes through which witches were lab...
This paper examines the dynamics of witchcraft trials in the Lorraine through a selection of late si...
This article focuses on the trial of Margaretha Horn, a sixty-two year old peasant woman arrested fo...
Given the widespread belief in witchcraft and the existence of laws against such practices, why did ...
The witch hysteria that overtook Christian Europe during the Early Modern era inspired a mass parano...
Analyses concerning the gender of the witches in Europe in the 15th-18th centuries show an unanimous...