15TH CENTURY WITCH THEORY AND WITCH HUNTING

I. The "New Crime" of Witchcraft in 15th century

   Fusion of:  Secular crime of maleficium with
Spiritual crime of apostasy (devil worship)

   Fusion of:  Popular image of the witch (malefica) with
Learned theory of witchcraft as diabolism

II. WITCH HUNTING BY KRAMER AND SPRENGER

1481-1486    38 executed in German Rhineland

    1484: Papal bull of Innocent VIII  (“witch bull”)
     SUMMIS DESIDERANTES AFFECTIBUS

            authorizes Dominican Inquisitors Kramer and Sprenger
            to stamp out witchcraft (maleficium) and devil worship

    1487  MALLEUS MALEFICARUM ("The Hammer of Witches")

    Epigraph: "NOT TO BELIEVE IN W/C IS THE GREATEST OF HERESIES"

    Organization of book:

      Pt 1  Definition of Crime:  Devil, Witch, Divine Permission
      Pt 2  Witchcraft i. How it operates (diabolical pact)
                                ii. How it may be opposed (remedies)
      Pt 3  How to try a witch (judicial manual)

             W/C = CRIMEN EXCEPTUM (exceptional crime)

      Circulation:      1486-1520 = 13 editions      1574-1669 = 16 editions

MALLEUS MALEFICARUM:    AUTHORITY & EXPERIENCE

Authoritative character of the work

1. Academic reputation of authors:
scholastic theologians at Cologne University
Sprenger as University Dean

2. printed with book:
Papal Bull "Summis Desiderantes" 1484
letter of support from Theology Faculty at Cologne

Appeals to authority within the work

1. Textual authorities:
Scripture, Church Fathers, Scholastic Theologians

2. Appeal to "experience" as evidence:

      a) their own and others' witch trial experiences especially witches' confessions
(parallel to Nider's quotation of   Judge Peter Von Greyerz / Stedelen trial)

      b) "common knowledge" about witches,   including popular stories, jokes

3. Issues of reality versus illusion --       K & S decide
for nightflying as real (against Canon Episcopi)
against "shape shifting" as demonic  illusion
against  castration by witches    as  illusion