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Who Burned the Witches?
SANDRA
MIESEL
The stench
of their burning is with us yet. The stakes and gibbets where witches
perished by the tens of thousands during early modern times still stand
in popular imagination. For historians, the so-called great European
witch-hunt has been a much-vexed issue, one easily contorted to suit the
prejudices of every age.
Since the
Enlightenment, rationalists have liked to cite witch-burning as a prime
example of medieval ignorance and religious (usually Catholic) bigotry
run amok. (Leftists today still denounce it as a cynical plot by the
strong against the weak.) Writing history that way was simple:
Historians catalogued horrors, disparaged religion (or at least someone
else's religion), and celebrated the triumph of science and liberal
government. The history of witchcraft seemed a settled issue in 1969
when Hugh Trevor-Roper published his classic essay, "The European
Witch-Craze of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries."
But a
clamor of new voices has since reopened the controversy. Members of the
growing neopagan revival — 200,000 strong in America today — claim
witches burned during the great witch-hunt as their martyred forebears.
Last year, a consortium of pagan leaders demanded a special apology from
Pope John Paul II on the Jubilee Day of Pardon. They mourned a "pagan
Holocaust" of nine million secret nature-worshippers exterminated by
Christians 500 years ago under the Inquisition.
Fifty
years ago, one of the neopagan movement's founders, Gerald Gardner,
coined the term "the Burning Times" to describe this time of
persecution. Although Gardner's historical expertise has since been
questioned, neo-pagan proponents Margot Adler and Starhawk (née Miriam
Simos) are still preaching Gardner's teachings because, they say,
"invented history is satisfying myth."
Nine
million women burned is a figure conveniently larger than the Jewish
Shoah, yet it was actually invented out of whole cloth by American
feminist Matilda Joslyn Gage in 1893. Radical feminists have made much
of this mass "gynecide," as antipornography activist Andrea Dworkin has
called it. The feminists see witches as the natural enemy of patriarchy,
rallying around them as Old Leftists did around the leaders of the
Spanish Republic. For them, as for pagans, playing the politics of
victimization strengthens solidarity.
Meanwhile,
those of a Green stripe, a group that overlaps with the pagans and
radical feminists, charge that suppressing witchcraft deprived medieval
people of alternative medicine and estranged them from ancient Earth
wisdom. In their 1973 book, Witches, Midwives, and Nurses: A History
of Women Healers, feminist and environmentalist writers Barbara
Ehrenreich and Deirdre English argued that witches were actually
midwives targeted by their rivals, male physicians. Ecofeminist Carolyn
Merchant has blamed patriarchal science for "the death of Nature" in her
book of that title.
Although
the general public has yet to notice, recent academic research has
largely demolished both the old Enlightenment certainties and the new
neopagan theories. Archival studies conducted in different regions of
Europe over the last few decades have more accurately measured who
killed how many of whom under what circumstances. Using the tools of
anthropology and psychology, historians have reconstructed the social
context in which the witch-hunts happened. They have a clearer picture
now of how witchcraft theories developed and on what intellectual bases.
A
Multitude of Myths
For
example, historians have now realized that witch-hunting was not
primarily a medieval phenomenon. It peaked in the 17th century, during
the rationalist age of Descartes, Newton, and St. Vincent de Paul.
Persecuting suspected witches was not an elite plot against the poor;
nor was practicing witchcraft a mode of peasant resistance. Catholics
and Protestants hunted witches with comparable vigor. Church and state
alike tried and executed them. It took more than pure Reason to end the
witch craze.
Nor were
witches secret pagans serving an ancient Triple Goddess and Horned God,
as the neopagans claim. In fact, no witch was ever executed for
worshiping a pagan deity. Matilda Gage's estimate of nine million women
burned is more than 200 times the best current estimate of 30,000 to
50,000 killed during the 400 years from 1400 to 1800 — a large number
but no Holocaust. And it wasn't all a burning time. Witches were hanged,
strangled, and beheaded as well. Witch-hunting was not woman-hunting: At
least 20 percent of all suspected witches were male. Midwives were not
especially targeted; nor were witches liquidated as obstacles to
professionalized medicine and mechanistic science.
This
revised set of facts should not entirely comfort Catholics, however.
Catholics have been misled — at times deliberately misled — about the
Church's role in the witch-hunts by apologists eager to present the
Church as innocent of witches' blood so as to refute the Enlightenment
theory that witch-burning was almost entirely a Catholic phenomenon.
Catholics should know that the thinking that set the great witch-hunt in
motion was developed by Catholic clerics before the Reformation.
But the
great witch-hunt was nonetheless remarkably slow in oming. Many cultures
around the world believed for millennia — and still believe — in
witches. In typical folklore, past and present, witches are night-flying
evildoers who inflict harm on others by supernatural means, such as
curses, the evil eye, and magic substances. Witchcraft is usually
thought of as an innate power, unlike sorcery, whose magical spells must
be learned. What Christianity uniquely added to those traditional
beliefs was Satan. God's enemies were said to join Satan's band of
demons through a pact and worship him at monstrous bacchanals called "sabbats,"
where they parodied the liturgy.
The Church
inherited Roman and Germanic laws regarding maleficent magic, laws that
treated witchcraft as a crime. But to St. Augustine, concrete witchcraft
consisted of idolatry and illusion rather than harm to others. Following
Augustine, an anonymous ninth-century text, Canon Episcopi,
became part of the Church's canon law, declaring that belief in the
reality of night-flying witches was heresy because there was no such
thing as an actual witch. Although the idolatry and heresy associated
with witchcraft resided only in the will, not in actual deeds, they were
nevertheless sinful, Augustine wrote. Punishment was in order — but not
burning.
The High
Middle Ages of the twelfth and 13th centuries saw the bloody suppression
of heretics, notably the Cathars in Provence. Measures against Jews,
magicians, and sexual deviants also grew harsher. These groups were
associated with a stereotyped set of blasphemies, orgies, and outrages,
including infanticide and cannibalism. Starting in 1232, the papal
Inquisition dispatched roving specialists to detect and punish heretics
outside existing legal systems.
Then, the
idea that witchcraft was a reality rather than a heretical illusion
suddenly made a comeback. The inquisitors who had cut their teeth on
heretics were dev!ouring accused witches as well by the end of the
Middle Ages. This was not simply a matter of shifting scapegoats to suit
market demand. In a society that feared supernatural menaces working
through human conspiracies, the sinister folk figure of the esoterically
schooled magician apparently fused with that of the petty village
wise-woman or cunning man to create the new phenomenon of the diabolical
witch.
After the
first wisps of this change in the late 14th century, the flames burst
forth around 1425 in the Savoy region, in what is now southeast France,
and in the canton of Valais in Switzerland, near the borders of France
and Italy. About 500 more witch trials followed before the Reformation
began in 1517.
The Witch-Hunter's Baedeker
Meanwhile,
witch-hunters' manuals multiplied, most notably the infamous Malleus
Maleficarum (Hammer of Witches), published in 1486. Its authors,
Jacob Sprenger and Heinrich Kraemer, were experienced Dominican
inquisitors who had burned 48 witches in one diocese alone and had
obtained a papal bull approving their mission. Reversing the old
principle of the Canon Episcopi, Sprenger and Kraemer proclaimed
that not believing in the reality of witches was heresy. Witches
regularly did physical as well as spiritual harm to others, they wrote,
and allegiance to the devil defined witchcraft. Sprenger and Kraemer
exhorted secular authorities to fight witches by any means necessary.
Malleus
Maleficarum (notice the feminine possessive of "witches") was a
vicious misogynist tract. It depicted women as the sexual playmates of
Satan, declaring: "All witchcraft comes from carnal lust, which is in
women insatiable." Ironically, Sprenger also had a deep devotion to
Mary. He helped to shape the modern rosary and founded the first rosary
confraternity.
Malleus
Maleficarum did not cover its ground completely, failing to discuss
the actual pact that witches made with the devil, the sabbat, familiars
(imps in animal form who aided witches), and night-flying. But those
elements did not always appear in witchcraft cases. By itself, the
Malleus started no new witch-panics, but it was freely used by later
witchcraft writers, Protestant and Catholic alike. The Spanish
inquistors were nearly alone in scoffing at its lack of sophistication.
The
demonologists who absorbed the Malleus were highly cultured men,
such as the Protestant Jean Bodin, "the Aristotle of the 16th century,"
and his contemporary, the Jesuit classicist Martin del Rio. Those
theoreticians pounded home the principle of the crimen exceptum:
Because witchcraft was so vile an offense, accused witches had no legal
rights. "Not one witch in a million would be accused or punished," Bodin
boasted, "if the procedure were governed by ordinary rules." Anyone who
defended accused witches or denied their crimes deserved the same
punishment as witches, Bodin wrote.
Socially
elite persecutors, demonologists, and judges relentlessly hunted witches
with the zeal of modern revolutionaries pursuing a political utopia. No
cost was too great, because witch-hunting served the greater good of
Christendom, in their view. They believed that witchcraft inverted
society's key values, disturbed godly order, challenged the divine right
of kings — the ancient doctrine that rulers derive their right to rule
from God — and diminished the majesty of God. It was thought that
witch-hunting saved souls and averted the wrath of God by purging
society of evil as the End Times loomed.
Commoners,
by contrast, simply wanted relief from the evildoers of folklore who,
they believed, were harming them, their children, their cattle, and
their crops. It was grassroots complaints that started most witch-hunts.
If authorities were too slow to act, peasants were capable of lynching
suspected neighbors.
Although
maleficium — physical harm — loomed much larger than diabolism in
common people's accusations against suspected witches, their folk
beliefs cross-fertilized the learned ones of Bodin and others in complex
ways. Through sermons, gossip, trial accounts, and luridly illustrated
"witch-books" (especially popular in Germany), everyone learned what
witches did and how to detect them.
Witches Everywhere
The 30,000
to 50,000 casualties of the European witch-hunts were not distributed
uniformly through time or space, even within particular jurisdictions.
Three-quarters of Europe saw not a single trial. Witch persecution
spread outward from its first center in alpine Italy in the early 15th
century, guttering out in Poland, where witchcraft laws were finally
repealed in 1788. The center had generally stopped trying witches before
the peripheries even started.
The
Spanish Road stretching from Italy to the Netherlands was also a
"witch-road." The Catholic-ruled Spanish Netherlands (today's Belgium)
saw far worse persecutions than the Protestant-ruled United Provinces of
the Netherlands, which had stopped burning convicted witches by 1600.
There were early panics in the German cities of Brandenburg and
Mecklenburg, as well as in Lorraine, France, and parts of Switzerland
and Scotland. The Rhineland and Southwest Germany suffered severe
outbreaks, with German ecclesiastical territories hit hardest.
Three-quarters of all witchcraft trials took place in the Catholic-ruled
territories of the Holy Roman Empire. But Catholic Portugal, Castile and
Spanish-ruled Italy, and the Orthodox lands of Eastern Europe saw
virtually none. The panic in Salem, Massachussetts, was as bad as
anything in England, but there seem to have !been no executions in the
Latin colonies of the New World.
The
regional tolls demonstrated the patchwork pattern of witch-hunting. The
town of Baden, Germany, for example, burned 200 witches from 1627 to
1630, more than all the convicted witches who perished in Sweden. The
tiny town of Ellwangen, Germany, burned 393 witches from 1611 to 1618,
more than Spain and Portugal combined ever executed. The Catholic
prince-bishop of Würzburg, Germany, burned 600 witches from 1628 to
1631, more witches than ever died in Protestant Sweden, Norway, Finland,
and Iceland combined. The Swiss canton of Vaud executed about 1,800
witches from 1611 to 1660, compared with Scotland's toll of between
1,300 and 1,500 and England's toll of 500. The claim of some Catholic
apologists that Elizabeth I executed 800 witches a year is gross
slander. In Southwest Germany alone, 3,229 people were executed for
witchcraft between 1562 and 1684!ash more than were executed for any
reason by the Spanish, Portugese, and Roman Inquisitions between 1500
and 1800. (All three of these Inquisitions burned fewer than a dozen
witches in total.)
The
most-dreaded lay witch-hunter was Nicholas Rémy, attorney general of
Lorraine, who boasted of sending 900 persons to the stake in a single
decade (1581-1591). But the all-time grand champion exterminator of
witches was Ferdinand von Wittelsbach, Catholic prince-archbishop of
Cologne, Germany, who burned 2,000 members of his flock during the
1630s.
Let no one
argue that witch-hunting was a predominantly Protestant activity. Both
Catholic and Protestant lands saw light and heavy hunts. Demonologists
and critics alike came from both religious camps.
Regional Influences
Local
factors, not religious loyalties, determined the severity of witch
persecutions. Roman law on the continent was harsher than English common
law. Prosecuting maleficium alone, as England and Scandanavia
did, yielded fewer victims than prosecuting diabolism (Scotland and
Germany) or white magic (Lorraine and France). Unlimited torture in
Germany induced more confessions than the limited torture in the
Franche-Comté region in France. English third-degree methods such as
sleep-deprivation were also effective ways of raising the number of
convictions.
Ignoring
denunciations procured through torture preserved Denmark from Germany's
dreadful chain-reaction panics in which accused witches would in turn
finger other witches. "Spectral evidence" from accusers' dreams was a
significant prosecution device in Salem. Finding a witch's mark
insensitive to pricking "or a witch's teat," on which familiars
allegedly fed, secured convictions in Scotland and England; uncertainty
about the credibility of witch's marks won acquittals in Geneva. Child
witnesses — often malicious liars — proved deadly in Sweden, the Basque
country in Spain, Germany, and England (the hysteria resembled that
surrounding the sex-abuse charges brought against U.S. day-care centers
during the 1980s).
Professional witch-finders had dire impact. The best-known of these
freelance accusers was England's Matthew Hopkins, who doomed up to 200
people from 1645 through 1647. But special inquisitors or investigative
committees were also lethal. Local judges were usually harsher than
professional jurists from outside the community. Reviews of convictions
by central authorities spared accused witches in Denmark, France,
Sweden, and Austria. An informal appeal from ministers outside Salem
halted the panic there.
Witch-hunting was typically part of broader campaigns to repress unruly
behavior and impose religious orthodoxies. The hunt played out in a
world of shrinking opportunities for ordinary folk. Early modern village
economies were often zero-sum games, where the death of a cow could ruin
a family. Peasants were locked into face-to-face contact with their
neighbor-enemies. Feuds could last for generations.
The
poorest and most marginalized people in communities were the most common
targets of the witch-hunts, but sometimes social subordinates and even
children turned the tables by accusing their wealthy superiors of
witchcraft.
Women were
more prominent than men at witchcraft trials, both as accused and as
accusers. Not only did Sprenger's image of women as the more lustful and
malicious sex generate suspicions; the fact that women had a lower
social status than men made them easier to accuse. In most regions,
about 80 percent of the alleged witches killed were female. Women were
then as likely to be accused witches as men were to be saints or violent
criminals. That was because women typically fought with curses instead
of steel. Although the stereotype did not always fit, the British witch
was usually seen as irascible, aggressive, unneighborly, and often
repulsive — hardly the gentle healer of neopagan fantasy. Her colorful
curses could blight everything down to "the little pig that lieth in the
sty." She magnified her powers to frighten others and extort favors. If
she could not be loved, she meant to be feared.
Alternatively, the witches of Lorraine were said to be "fine and crafty,
careful not to quarrel with people or threaten them. Effusive
compliments were signs of suspected witchcraft in Lorraine, and
suppressed anger could be ominous. Being innocent of the impossible
crimes associated with witchcraft did not necessarily mean that
witch-hunt victims were "nice." Some were prostitutes, beggars, or petty
criminals. Austria's Zauberjäeckl trials (1675-1690) punished as witches
people who were actually dangerous felons. The Magic Jacket Society
prosecuted in those trials was a Baroque version of the Hell's Angels,
recruiting waifs whom it controlled through black magic, sodomy, and
conjurations with mice. The prince-archbishop of Salzburg, Austria,
graciously forbade executing members of the society who were under the
age of twelve. But 200 others were put to death.
Panic and Torture
Witch-hunting could be endemic or epidemic. Its dynamics varied. Small
panics (fewer than 20 victims) tended to occur in villages worried about
maleficium. Their victims were often poor, obnoxious persons
whose removal the rest of the community applauded.
If small
panics fed on long-smoldering fears about neighbors, large ones exploded
without warning, killing people of all classes and conditions and
rupturing social bonds. The worst examples of this were in Germany,
where unlimited use of torture (in defiance of imperial law) produced an
ever-expanding wave of denunciations. To object was to court death.
Large
witch-panics started with the usual obscure suspects and worked up the
social scale to prosperous citizens, reputable matrons, high-ranking
clerics, town officials, and even judges. The longer a panic lasted, the
higher was the proportion of male and wealthy victims.
According
to the Dutch Jesuit Cornelius van Loos, confiscations from suspected
witches in large panics could "coin gold and silver from human blood."
Youngsters were legally old enough to burn as soon as they could
distinguish "gold from an apple." Children as young as nine were burned
in Würzburg, including the bishop's nephew, and boys ages three and four
were imprisoned as Satan's catamites.
Some of
the German trials were marred by collusion, bribes, and rape.
Unspeakable tortures were routine — 17 different kinds were authorized
by "the Saxon lawgiver," Benedikt Carpzov, during the 17th century.
Confessing "without torture" in Germany meant without torture that drew
blood. Nearly all who underwent this broke, even the blameless.
Yet
witches sometimes did turn themselves in and confess spontaneously, the
equivalent of today's "suicide by police." The same melancholy,
frustration, and despair that they claimed had driven them into the
devil's arms brought them willingly to the stake. They had apparently
come to believe the wish-fulfillment fantasies of pleasure and revenge
enacted in the theaters of their minds. Nevertheless, they still hoped
to save their souls through pain.
A few
brave men spoke up for justice. In 1563, Johann Weyer, a Protestant
court physician, drew attention to the cruelty of the trials and the
mental incompetence of many of the accused. English country gentleman
Reginald Scot mocked witchcraft as popish nonsense in 1584. In 1631, the
Jesuit Friedrich von Spee, confessor to witches burned at Mainz,
proclaimed them innocent victims. Van Loos, witness to the horrors of
witchcraft trials at Trier, !had his manuscript confiscated in 1592
before it could be published and was himself imprisoned and banished.
Ironically, a Spanish inquisitor named Alonso Salazar y Frias mounted
the most dramatic challenge to witch-hunting. In 1609, a panic among
French Basques in the western Pyrenees on the Bay of Biscay spilled over
into the Navarra region in Spain, where six accused witches went to the
stake. But Salazar, who had been a judge in that trial, became skeptical
as the panic widened to engulf 1,800 suspects, 1,500 of them children.
Basque witches' confessions included such incredible details as
familiars in the form of costumed toads that child-witches herded with
little crooks during sabbats.
Salazar
cross-checked testimony, had supposed magic substances tested, and
applied logic to conclude that the alleged witches were simply an
artifact of witch-hunting. "There were neither witches nor bewitched
until they were talked !and written about," he reported in 1610. With
stubborn patience, Salazar wrested a decision from his superiors that
freed the accused in 1614. The Spanish Inquisition never executed
another witch; nor did it permit secular authorities to do so after an
outbreak in Catalonia that saw more than 300 witches hanged between 1616
and 1619. What could have erupted into Europe's worst witch-panic was
extinguished by one man.
Cooling Ashes
Slowly,
the critics were vindicated, and ashes cooled all across Europe during
the 18th century. This was no simple triumph of Enlightenment wisdom.
Witch beliefs persisted — as they do today — but witches no longer faced
stakes, gallows, or swords. The great witch-panics had left a kind of
psychic weariness in their wake. Realizing that innocents had been
cruelly sent to their deaths, people no longer trusted their courts'
judgments. As Montaigne had written 200 years earlier, "It is putting a
very high price on one's conjectures to have a man roasted alive because
of them."
After a
20th century unmatched for bloodshed, the world today is in no position
to disparage early modern Europe. Witch-hunts have much in common with
our own political purges, imagined conspiracies, and rumors of
ritualized child abuse. Our capacity to project enormities on the enemy
Other is as strong as ever.
The truth
about witch-hunting is worth knowing for its own sake. But the issue has
added significance for Catholics because it has! provided ammunition for
rationalists, pagans, and radical feminists to attack the Church. It is
helpful to know that the number of victims has been grossly exaggerated,
and that the reasons for the persecutions had as much to do with social
factors as with religious ones.
But
although Catholics have been fed comforting errors by overeager
apologists about the Church's part in persecuting witches, we must face
our own tragic past. Fellow Catholics, to whom we are forever bound in
the communion of saints, did sin grievously against people accused of
witchcraft. If our historical memory can be truly purified, then the
smoke from the Burning Times can finally disperse.
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Suggested Reading:
Paul Boyer and Stephen Nissenbaum, Salem Possessed: The
Social Origins of Witchcraft (Harvard University Press,
1974).
Robin Briggs, Witches and Neighbors: The Social and Cultural
Context of European Witchcraft (Viking, 1996). This is the
best point of entry to modern scholarship on witchcraft.
Gustav Henningsen, The Witches' Advocate: Basque Witchcraft
and the Spanish Inquisition (University of Nevada Press,
1980).
Ronald Hutton, The Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern
Pagan Witchcraft (Oxford University Press, 1999).
H.C. Erik Midelfort, Witch Hunting in Southwestern Germany
1562-1684: The Social and Intellectual Foundations (Stanford
University Press, 1972).
James Sharpe, Instruments of Darkness: Witchcraft in Early
Modern England (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1996).
Starhawk, Dreaming the Dark: Magic, Sex and Politics
(Beacon, 1988).
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Sandra
Miesel. "Who Burned the Witches?" Crisis 19, no. 9 (October
2001): 21-26.
This
article is reprinted with permission from the Morley Institute a
non-profit education organization. To subscribe to Crisis
magazine call 1-800-852-9962.
THE AUTHOR
Sandra
Miesel, medievalist and Catholic journalist, writes from Indianapolis.
Copyright © 2001
Crisis
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