The European Witch-craze of the 16th and 17th Centuries |
Contents
Foreword to the Pelican edition | 7 |
SOCIAL ORIGINS | 24 |
INTELLECTUAL ELABORATION | 40 |
Copyright | |
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Other editions - View all
The European Witch-craze of the 16th and 17th Centuries Hugh Redwald Trevor-Roper No preview available - 1990 |
Common terms and phrases
Ages Alps already areas arguments authority became belief bishops Bodin brought bull burnt Calvinist Catholic century Christian Church clergy confessions continued countries course craze critics death demonology demons Devil discovered doctrine Dominicans doubt effect England English established Europe European evidence explained fact fear force France French Germany given heresy Hexenprozess historians History human ideas Inquisition inquisitors intellectual interpretation Italy James Jesuit Jews Johann judges King Languedoc later lawyers least less liberal look Lutheran Malleus Materials medieval merely mountain mythology natural never once orthodoxy pagan Paris persecution philosophy Pope princes Protestant published Pyrenees question rationalism reason reference Reformation religion remained Renaissance sabbat says sceptics Scot Scotland seemed seen seventeenth century showed sixteenth century social society Spain Spanish superstition tion torture trials universal victims Weyer whole witch-beliefs witch-craze witch-trials witchcraft witches write wrote