Early Modern European Witchcraft: Centres and Peripheries
Early Modern European Witchcraft: Centres and Peripheries
Paperback – Dec 1 1995
by Bengt Ankarloo (Editor), Gustav Henningsen (Editor)
"Opens new perspectives with almost every article...This marvelous book...is the best book on witchcraft I have read since Stolen Lightning and it is much easier to follow. It is mandatory for all students of the legal systems and the religious beliefs of early modern Europe...A truly international and interdisciplinary masterwork." --Bibliotheque d'Humanisme et Renaissance
The history of witchcraft and sorcery has attracted a great deal of interest and debate, but until now studies have been largely from the Anglo-Saxon perspective.
This book shows how that approach has blurred our understanding and definition of the issues involved, and sheds new light on the history of witchcraft in England.
What had thus far been seen as peculiar to England is here shown to be characteristic of much of northern Europe.
Taking into account major new developments in the historiography of witchcraft--in methodology, and in the chronological and geographical scope of the studies--the authors explore the relationship between witchcraft, law, and theology; the origins and nature of the witch's sabbath; the sociology and criminology of witch-hunting; and the comparative approach to European witchcraft.
An impressive amount of archival work by all of the contributors has produced an indispensable guide to the study of witchcraft, of interest not only to historians, but to anthropologists, criminologists, psychologists, and sociologists.