                                WITCHCRAFT

   Witchcraft as a type of black MAGIC or sorcery exists in many societies,
but the phenomenon has a special significance in western European history.
European witchcraft was unique because it combined the idea of harmful sorcery
with that of serving SATAN, or the devil (in traditional Christian belief, a
spirit hostile to God). A witch was defined by the 16th-century French writer
Jean Bodin as "someone who knowingly tries to bring about some act through
diabolical means."
 
   Witches were blamed for causing lingering illnesses or death to humans and
domestic animals, sending demons into people's bodies, and destroying crops
with hailstorms. They reputedly met together at gatherings called Sabbats,
where they parodied Christian rituals, did obscene homage to the devil, and
held bizarre orgies. Because of their pact with Satan, they were supposed to
have a special mark or scar on their bodies that never bled or hurt when
pricked by sharp instruments.
 
   The European doctrine of witchcraft was formulated in the late Middle Ages.
Just how many of the beliefs about witches were based on reality and how many
on delusion will never be known.  The punishment of supposed witches by the
death penalty did not become common until the 15th century. The first major
witch-hunt occurred in Switzerland in 1427, and the first important book on
the subject, the Malleus maleficarum (Hammer of Sorceresses), appeared in
Germany in 1486. The persecution of witches reached its height between 1580
and 1660, when witch trials became almost universal throughout western Europe.
 
   Geographically, the center of witch-burning lay in Germany, Austria, and
Switzerland, but few areas were left untouched by it. No one knows the total
number of victims. In southwestern Germany alone, however, more than 3,000
witches were executed between 1560 and 1680. Not all witch trials ended in
deaths. In England, where torture was prohibited, only about 20 percent of
accused witches were executed (by hanging); in Scotland, where torture was
used, nearly half of all those put on trial were burned at the stake, and
almost three times as many witches (1,350) were killed as in England. Some
places had fewer trials than others. In the Dutch republic, no witches were
executed after 1600, and none were tried after 1610. In Spain and Italy
accusations of witchcraft were handled by the INQUISITION, and although
torture was legal, only a dozen witches were burned out of 5,000 put on trial.
Ireland apparently escaped witch trials altogether. Many witch trials were
provoked, not by hysterical authorities or fanatical clergy, but by village
quarrels among neighbors.
 
   About 80% of all accused witches were women. Traditional theology assumed
that women were weaker than men and more likely to succumb to the devil. It
may in fact be true that, having few legal rights, they were more inclined to
settle quarrels by resorting to magic rather than law.
 
   All these aspects of witchcraft crossed over to the Americas with European
colonists. In the Spanish and French territories cases of witchcraft were
under the jurisdiction of church courts, and no one suffered death on this
charge. In the English colonies about 40 people were executed for witchcraft
between 1650 and 1710, half of them in the famous SALEM WITCH TRIALS of 1692.
 
   Witch trials declined in most parts of Europe after 1680; in England the
death penalty for witchcraft was abolished in 1736.  In the late 17th and 18th
centuries one last wave of witch persecution afflicted Poland and other areas
of eastern Europe, but that ended by about 1740. The last legal execution of a
witch occurred in Switzerland in 1782.
 
   Beginning in the 1920s, witchcraft was revived as a kind of fad among
various middle-class occult groups in Europe and America. This phenomenon was
partly inspired by such books as Margaret Murray's The Witch Cult in Western
Europe (1921), which interpreted witchcraft as a pre-Christian fertility cult
of ancient Egyptian origin. More recently the phenomenon has been influenced
by the idea that witches' trances at Sabbats were caused by hallucinogenic
drugs.  The term witch-hunt also survives to describe a drive to punish
political criminals conducted without regard for normal legal rules.
 
Bibliography: Baroja, Julio C., The World of Witches (1964); Monter, E. W.,
ed., European Witchcraft (1969); Thomas, Keith, Religion and the Decline of
Magic (1971).

