The history of witchcraft as a crime in England maps roughly onto the early modern period as a whole. Exactly how many suspected witches were prosecuted between 1542 and 1736 is unknown; we can only extrapolate from where records are most complete. An estimated 1,000 trials, spread over two centuries and 9,000 parishes, suggests that it would have been rare to experience one directly. Some places, notably in Essex, indicted scores of witches; many more did not. Despite the persistent notion that villagers routinely used accusations to explain misfortunes and attack enemies, the numbers speak for themselves. Perhaps, then, witchcraft has attracted more attention than it deserves. And yet it is justified as a historical subject by more than q...
Following the passage of legislation making witchcraft a capital crime during the mid-sixteenth cent...
This article weaves together two episodes separated by a generation. The inciting event is the trial...
For the people of early modern England, the dividing line between the natural and supernatural world...
This thesis is the first sustained analysis of witchcraft and the law as represented on the English ...
From the very earliest times, mankind recognized the existence of witchcraft, but, apart from isolat...
The close relationship which frequently existed between politics and the occult in early modern Engl...
Crime and law have now been studied by historians of early modern England for more than a generation...
This thesis explores the event in Manningtree, a small town in Essex, in 1645 that began the two‐yea...
Chloe Chaplin Dr. Kathy Callahan, Faculty Mentor Dept. of History Witchcraft in Scotland This resear...
Given the widespread belief in witchcraft and the existence of laws against such practices, why did ...
The dissertation examines the explosion of early modern English writing on witchcraft that occurred ...
The searches for the cultural spaces of early modern European beliefs in the supernatural have follo...
This book represents the first systematic study of the role of the Devil in English witchcraft pamph...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The project has create...
By the end of the fifteenth century, demonological beliefs were well established by demonologists, i...
Following the passage of legislation making witchcraft a capital crime during the mid-sixteenth cent...
This article weaves together two episodes separated by a generation. The inciting event is the trial...
For the people of early modern England, the dividing line between the natural and supernatural world...
This thesis is the first sustained analysis of witchcraft and the law as represented on the English ...
From the very earliest times, mankind recognized the existence of witchcraft, but, apart from isolat...
The close relationship which frequently existed between politics and the occult in early modern Engl...
Crime and law have now been studied by historians of early modern England for more than a generation...
This thesis explores the event in Manningtree, a small town in Essex, in 1645 that began the two‐yea...
Chloe Chaplin Dr. Kathy Callahan, Faculty Mentor Dept. of History Witchcraft in Scotland This resear...
Given the widespread belief in witchcraft and the existence of laws against such practices, why did ...
The dissertation examines the explosion of early modern English writing on witchcraft that occurred ...
The searches for the cultural spaces of early modern European beliefs in the supernatural have follo...
This book represents the first systematic study of the role of the Devil in English witchcraft pamph...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The project has create...
By the end of the fifteenth century, demonological beliefs were well established by demonologists, i...
Following the passage of legislation making witchcraft a capital crime during the mid-sixteenth cent...
This article weaves together two episodes separated by a generation. The inciting event is the trial...
For the people of early modern England, the dividing line between the natural and supernatural world...