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Witchcraft

Witchcraft, as most commonly understood in both historical and present-day communities, is the use of alleged supernatural powers of magic. A witch (from Old English wicce f. / wicca m.) is a practitioner of witchcraft. Traditionally, "witchcraft" means the use of magic or supernatural powers to inflict harm or misfortune on others, and this remains the most common and widespread meaning.[1] According to Encyclopedia Britannica, "Witchcraft thus defined exists more in the imagination of contemporaries than in any objective reality. Yet this stereotype has a long history and has constituted for many cultures a viable explanation of evil in the world."[2] The belief in witchcraft has been found in a great number of societies worldwide. Anthropologists have applied the English term "witchcraft" to similar beliefs in occult practices in many different cultures, and societies that have adopted the English language have often internalised the term.[3][4][5]

The Witches by Hans Baldung (woodcut), 1508

In medieval and early modern Europe, where belief in witchcraft traces back to classical antiquity, accused witches were usually women who were believed to have used black magic (maleficium) against their own community, and often to have communed with evil beings, though British anthropologist Jean La Fontaine notes that the "stereotype of evil appears not to have been closely connected to the actions of real people except when it was mobilised against the current enemies of the Church."[6] Usually, accusations of witchcraft were made by their neighbors and followed from social tensions. It was thought witchcraft could be thwarted by protective magic or counter-magic, which could be provided by the 'cunning folk' or 'wise people'. Suspected witches were also intimidated, banished, attacked or killed. Often they would be formally prosecuted and punished, if found guilty or simply believed to be guilty. European witch-hunts and witch trials in the early modern period led to tens of thousands of executions. While magical healers and midwives were sometimes accused of witchcraft themselves,[7][8][9][10] they made up a minority of those accused. European belief in witchcraft gradually dwindled during and after the Age of Enlightenment.

Many Indigenous communities that believe in the existence of witchcraft likewise define witches as malevolent, and seek healers and medicine people for protection against witchcraft.[11][12] Some African and Melanesian peoples believe witches are driven by an evil spirit or substance inside them. Modern witch-hunting takes place in parts of Africa and Asia. By contrast, other indigenous groups view witchcraft in other ways, including as a method of preserving cultural knowledge.[13][14][15][16][verification needed]

Today, some followers of Wiccan-related neo-paganism self-identify as "witches" and use the term "witchcraft" for their magico-religious beliefs and practices (see Neopagan Witchcraft), primarily in Western anglophone countries.[17][18][19] Other neo-pagans avoid the term due to its negative connotations.[20]

Concept Edit

The concept of witchcraft and the belief in its existence have persisted throughout recorded history. According to the Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions's 2009 Report there is "difficulty of defining ‘witches’ and ‘witchcraft’ across cultures - terms that, quite apart from their connotations in popular culture, may include an array of traditional or faith healing practices and are not easily defined."[4] The concept of malevolent magic has been found among cultures worldwide,[3][21] and it is prominent in some cultures today.[22] Most societies have believed in, and feared, an ability by some individuals to cause supernatural harm and misfortune to others. This may come from mankind's tendency "to want to assign occurrences of remarkable good or bad luck to agency, either human or superhuman".[23] Historian Ronald Hutton says:

[Malevolent magic] is, however, only one current usage of the word. In fact, Anglo-American senses of it now take at least four different forms, although the one discussed above seems still to be the most widespread and frequent. The others define the witch figure as any person who uses magic ... or as the practitioner of nature-based Pagan religion; or as a symbol of independent female authority and resistance to male domination. All have validity in the present, and to call anybody wrong for using any one of them would be to reveal oneself as bereft of general knowledge, as well as scholarship.[23]

Historians and anthropologists see the concept of "witchcraft" as one of the ways humans have tried to explain strange misfortune.[23][24] Some cultures have feared witchcraft much less than others, because they tend to have other explanations for strange misfortune; for example that it was caused by gods, spirits, demons or fairies, or by other humans who have unwittingly cast the evil eye.[23] For example, the Gaels of Ireland and the Scottish Highlands historically held a strong belief in fairy folk, who could cause supernatural harm, and witch-hunting was very rare in these regions compared to other regions of the British Isles.[25]

Hutton outlined five key characteristics ascribed to witches and witchcraft by most cultures that believe in the concept. Traditionally, witchcraft was believed to be the use of magic to cause harm or misfortune to others; it was used by the witch against their own community; it was seen as immoral and often thought to involve communion with evil beings; powers of witchcraft were believed to have been acquired through inheritance or initiation; and witchcraft could be thwarted by defensive magic, persuasion, intimidation or physical punishment of the alleged witch.[26]

Historically, the Christian concept of witchcraft derives from Old Testament laws against it. In medieval and early modern Europe, many common folk who were Christians believed in magic. As opposed to the helpful magic of the cunning folk, witchcraft was seen as evil and associated with the Devil and Devil worship. This often resulted in deaths, torture and scapegoating (casting blame for misfortune),[27][28] and many years of large scale witch-trials and witch hunts, especially in Protestant Europe, before largely ending during the European Age of Enlightenment. Christian views in the modern day are diverse and cover the gamut of views from intense belief and opposition (especially by Christian fundamentalists) to non-belief.

Many cultures worldwide continue to have a belief in the concept of "witchcraft" or malevolent magic. During the Age of Colonialism, many cultures were exposed to the modern Western world via colonialism, usually accompanied and often preceded by intensive Christian missionary activity (see "Christianization"). In these cultures, beliefs about witchcraft were partly influenced by the prevailing Western concepts of the time. Witch-hunts, scapegoating, and the killing or shunning of suspected witches still occur in the modern era.[29]

Suspicion of modern medicine, due to beliefs about illness being caused by witchcraft, continues in many countries, with serious healthcare consequences. HIV/AIDS[30] and Ebola[31] are two examples of often-lethal infectious disease epidemics whose medical care and containment has been severely hampered by regional beliefs in witchcraft. Other severe medical conditions whose treatment is hampered in this way include tuberculosis, leprosy, epilepsy and the common severe bacterial Buruli ulcer.[32][33]

From the mid-20th century, "Witchcraft" was adopted as the name of some neo-pagan movements, including religions such as Wicca.[34] Its creators believed in the witch-cult theory, that accused witches had actually been followers of a surviving pagan religion, but this witch-cult theory is now discredited.[35]

Etymology Edit

The word is over a thousand years old: Old English formed the compound wiccecræft from wicce ('witch') and cræft ('craft').[36] The masculine form was wicca ('male sorcerer').[37]

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, wicce and wicca were probably derived from the Old English verb wiccian, meaning 'to practice witchcraft'.[38] Wiccian has a cognate in Middle Low German wicken (attested from the 13th century). The further etymology of this word is problematic. It has no clear cognates in other Germanic languages outside of English and Low German, and there are numerous possibilities for the Indo-European root from which it may have derived.

Another Old English word for 'witch' was hægtes or hægtesse, which became the modern English word "hag" and is linked to the word "hex". In most other Germanic languages, their word for 'witch' comes from the same root as these; for example German Hexe and Dutch heks.[39]

In colloquial modern English, the word witch is generally used for women. A male practitioner of magic or witchcraft is more commonly called a 'wizard', or sometimes, 'warlock'. When the word witch is used to refer to a member of a neo-pagan tradition or religion (such as Wicca), it can refer to a person of any gender.[40]

Practices Edit

 
Preparation for the Witches' Sabbath by David Teniers the Younger. It shows a witch brewing a potion overlooked by her familiar spirit or a demon; items on the floor for casting a spell; and another witch reading from a grimoire while anointing the buttocks of a young witch about to fly upon an inverted besom.

The historical and traditional definition of "witchcraft" is the use of black magic (maleficium) or supernatural powers to cause harm and misfortune to others. Where belief in harmful magic exists, it is typically forbidden by law as well as hated and feared by the general populace, while helpful magic is tolerated or even accepted wholesale by the people, even if the orthodox establishment opposes it.[41]

It is commonly believed that witches use objects, words and gestures to cause supernatural harm, or that they simply have an innate power to do so. Hutton notes that both kinds of witches are often believed to exist in the same culture. He says that the two often overlap, in that someone with an inborn power could wield that power through material objects.[42] In his 1937 study of Azande witchcraft beliefs, E. E. Evans-Pritchard reserved the term "witchcraft" for the actions of those who inflict harm by their inborn power, and used "sorcery" for those who needed tools to do so.[43]

Historians found it difficult to apply to European witchcraft, where witches were believed to use physical techniques, as well as some who were believed to cause harm by thought alone.[4] This distinction "has now largely been abandoned, although some anthropologists still sometimes find it relevant to the particular societies with which they are concerned".[42] While most cultures believe witchcraft to be something willful, some Indigenous peoples in Africa and Melanesia believe witches have a substance or an evil spirit in their bodies that drives them to do harm.[42]

Witches are commonly believed to cast curses; a spell or set of magical words and gestures intended to inflict supernatural harm.[44] As well as repeating words and gestures, cursing could involve inscribing runes or sigils on an object to give that object magical powers; burning or binding a wax or clay image (a poppet) of a person to affect them magically; or using herbs, animal parts and other substances to make potions or poisons.[45][46][47][42]

A common belief in cultures worldwide is that witches tend to use something from their victim's body to work black magic against them; for example hair, nail clippings, clothing, or bodily waste. Such beliefs are found in Europe, Africa, South Asia, Polynesia, Melanesia, and North America.[42] Another widespread belief among Indigenous peoples in Africa and North America is that witches cause harm by introducing cursed magical objects into their victim's body; such as small bones or ashes.[42]

In some cultures, malevolent witches are believed to use human body parts in magic,[42] and they are commonly believed to murder children for this purpose. In Europe, "cases in which women did undoubtedly kill their children, because of what today would be called postpartum psychosis, were often interpreted as yielding to diabolical temptation".[48]

Witches are believed to work in secret, sometimes alone and sometimes with other witches. Hutton writes: "Across most of the world, witches have been thought to gather at night, when normal humans are inactive, and also at their most vulnerable in sleep".[42] In most cultures, witches at these gatherings are thought to transgress social norms by engaging in cannibalism, incest and open nudity.[42]

Another widespread belief is that witches have a demonic helper or "familiar", often in animal form. Witches are also often thought to be able to shapeshift into animals themselves.[49]

Witchcraft has been blamed for many kinds of misfortune. In Europe, by far the most common kind of harm attributed to witchcraft was illness or death suffered by adults, their children, or their animals. "Certain ailments, like impotence in men, infertility in women, and lack of milk in cows, were particularly associated with witchcraft". Illnesses that were poorly understood were more likely to be blamed on witchcraft. Edward Bever writes: "Witchcraft was particularly likely to be suspected when a disease came on unusually swiftly, lingered unusually long, could not be diagnosed clearly, or presented some other unusual symptoms".[50]

Necromancy is the practice of conjuring the spirits of the dead for divination or prophecy, although the term has also been applied to raising the dead for other purposes. The biblical Witch of Endor performed it (1 Samuel 28th chapter), and it is among the witchcraft practices condemned by Ælfric of Eynsham:[51][52][53] "Witches still go to cross-roads and to heathen burials with their delusive magic and call to the devil; and he comes to them in the likeness of the man that is buried there, as if he arises from death."[54]

Historical and religious perspectives Edit

Near East beliefs Edit

The belief in sorcery and its practice seem to have been widespread in the ancient Near East and Nile Valley. It played a conspicuous role in the cultures of ancient Egypt and in Babylonia. The latter tradition included an Akkadian anti-witchcraft ritual, the Maqlû. A section from the Code of Hammurabi (about 2000 BC) prescribes:

If a man has put a spell upon another man and it is not justified, he upon whom the spell is laid shall go to the holy river; into the holy river shall he plunge. If the holy river overcome him and he is drowned, the man who put the spell upon him shall take possession of his house. If the holy river declares him innocent and he remains unharmed the man who laid the spell shall be put to death. He that plunged into the river shall take possession of the house of him who laid the spell upon him.[55]

Abrahamic religions Edit

Witchcraft's historical evolution in the Middle East reveals a multi-phase journey influenced by culture, spirituality, and societal norms. Ancient witchcraft in the Near East intertwined mysticism with nature through rituals and incantations aligned with local beliefs. In ancient Judaism, magic had a complex relationship, with some forms accepted due to mysticism[56] while others were considered heretical.[57] The medieval Middle East experienced shifting perceptions of witchcraft under Islamic and Christian influences, sometimes revered for healing and other times condemned as heresy.

Jewish attitudes toward witchcraft were rooted in its association with idolatry and necromancy, and some rabbis even practiced certain forms of magic themselves.[58][59] References to witchcraft in the Tanakh, or Hebrew Bible, highlighted strong condemnations rooted in the "abomination" of magical belief. Christianity similarly condemned witchcraft, considering it an abomination and even citing specific verses to justify witch-hunting during the early modern period.

Islamic perspectives on magic encompass a wide range of practices,[60] with belief in black magic and the evil eye coexisting alongside strict prohibitions against its practice.[61] The Quran acknowledges the existence of magic and seeks protection from its harm. Islam's stance is against the practice of magic, considering it forbidden, and emphasizes divine miracles rather than magic or witchcraft.[62] The historical continuity of witchcraft in the Middle East underlines the complex interaction between spiritual beliefs and societal norms across different cultures and epochs.

Ancient Roman world Edit

 
Caius Furius Cressinus Accused of Sorcery, Jean-Pierre Saint-Ours, 1792

During the pagan era of ancient Rome, there were laws against harmful magic.[63] According to Pliny, the 5th century BC laws of the Twelve Tables laid down penalties for uttering harmful incantations and for stealing the fruitfulness of someone else's crops by magic.[63] The only recorded trial involving this law was that of Gaius Furius Cresimus.[63]

The Classical Latin word veneficium meant both poisoning and causing harm by magic (such as magic potions), although ancient people would not have distinguished between the two.[64] In 331 BC, a deadly epidemic hit Rome and at least 170 women were executed for causing it by veneficium. In 184–180 BC, another epidemic hit Italy, and about 5,000 were executed for veneficium.[64] If the reports are accurate, writes Hutton, "then the Republican Romans hunted witches on a scale unknown anywhere else in the ancient world".[64]

Under the Lex Cornelia de sicariis et veneficis of 81 BC, killing by veneficium carried the death penalty. During the early Imperial era, the Lex Cornelia began to be used more broadly against other kinds of magic,[64] including sacrifices made for evil purposes. The magicians were to be burnt at the stake.[63]

Witch characters—women who work powerful evil magic—appear in ancient Roman literature from the first century BC onward. They are typically hags who chant harmful incantations; make poisonous potions from herbs and the body parts of animals and humans; sacrifice children; raise the dead; can control the natural world; can shapeshift themselves and others into animals; and invoke underworld deities and spirits. They include Lucan's Erichtho, Horace's Canidia, Ovid's Dipsas, and Apuleius's Meroe.[64]

Witchcraft and folk healers Edit

 
Diorama of a cunning woman or wise woman in the Museum of Witchcraft and Magic

Traditionally, the terms "witch" and "witchcraft" mean those attempt to do harmful magic, specifically harm done to the person's own community. Most societies that have believed in witchcraft and black magic have also believed in helpful types of magic. Some have termed positive magic, 'white magic', at least in more recent eras, in English.[65] Historian Owen Davies says the term "white witch" was rarely used before the 20th century.[66]

In these societies, practitioners of helpful magic, usually known as cunning folk, have traditionally provided services such as breaking the effects of witchcraft, healing, divination, finding lost or stolen goods, and love magic.[67] In Britain, and some other places in Europe, they have commonly been known as cunning folk or wise people.[67] Alan McFarlane wrote in 1999 that while cunning folk is the usual name, some are also known as 'blessers' or 'wizards', but might in some circumstances be known as 'white', 'good', or 'unbinding witches'.[68] Ronald Hutton uses the general term "service magicians".[67] Often these people were involved in identifying alleged witches.[65]

Such beneficial magic-workers "were normally contrasted with the witch who practised maleficium—that is, magic used for harmful ends".[69] In the early years of the witch hunts "the cunning folk were widely tolerated by church, state and general populace".[69] Some of the more hostile churchmen and secular authorities tried to smear folk-healers and magic-workers by falsely branding them 'witches' and associating them with harmful 'witchcraft',[67] but generally the masses did not accept this and continued to make use of their services.[70] The English MP and skeptic Reginald Scot sought to disprove magic and witchcraft, writing in The Discoverie of Witchcraft (1584), "At this day, it is indifferent to say in the English tongue, 'she is a witch' or 'she is a wise woman'".[71] Historian Keith Thomas adds "Nevertheless, it is possible to isolate that kind of 'witchcraft' which involved the employment (or presumed employment) of some occult means of doing harm to other people in a way which was generally disapproved of. In this sense the belief in witchcraft can be defined as the attribution of misfortune to occult human agency".[8]Emma Wilby says folk magicians in Europe were viewed ambivalently by communities, and were considered as capable of harming as of healing,[72] which could lead to their being accused as using witchcraft to harm the innocent. She suggests some English "witches" convicted of consorting with demons may have been cunning folk whose supposed fairy familiars had been demonised.[73]

Hutton says that healers and cunning folk "were sometimes denounced as witches, but seem to have made up a minority of the accused in any area studied".[65] Likewise, Davies says "relatively few cunning-folk were prosecuted under secular statutes for witchcraft" and were dealt with more leniently than alleged witches. The Constitutio Criminalis Carolina (1532) of the Holy Roman Empire, and the Danish Witchcraft Act of 1617, stated that workers of folk magic should be dealt with differently from witches.[74] It was suggested by Richard Horsley that cunning folk (devins-guerisseurs, 'diviner-healers') made up a significant proportion of those tried for witchcraft in France and Switzerland, but more recent surveys conclude that they made up less than 2% of the accused.[75] However, Éva Pócs says that half the accused witches in Hungary seem to have been healers,[76] and Kathleen Stokker says the "vast majority" of Norway's accused witches were folk healers.[77]

Thwarting witchcraft Edit

 
A witch bottle, used as counter-magic against witchcraft

Societies that believed in witchcraft also believed that it could be thwarted in various ways. One common way was to use protective magic or counter-magic, of which the cunning folk were experts.[65] This included charms, talismans and amulets, anti-witch marks, witch bottles, witch balls, and burying objects such as horse skulls inside the walls of buildings.[78] Another believed cure for bewitchment was to persuade or force the alleged witch to lift their spell.[65] Often, people would attempt to thwart the witchcraft by physically punishing the alleged witch, such as by banishing, wounding, torturing or killing them. "In most societies, however, a formal and legal remedy was preferred to this sort of private action", whereby the alleged witch would be prosecuted and then formally punished if found guilty.[65] This often resulted in execution.

Accusations of witchcraft Edit

 
Alleged witches being accused in the Salem witch trials

Throughout the world, accusations of witchcraft are often linked to social and economic tensions. Females are most often accused, but in some cultures it is mostly males. In many societies, accusations are directed mainly against the elderly, but in others age is not a factor, and in some cultures it is mainly adolescents who are accused.[79]

In pre-modern Europe, most of those accused were women, and accusations of witchcraft usually came from their neighbors who accused them of inflicting harm or misfortune by magical means.[80] Macfarlane found that women made accusations of witchcraft as much as men did. Deborah Willis adds, "The number of witchcraft quarrels that began between women may actually have been higher; in some cases, it appears that the husband as 'head of household' came forward to make statements on behalf of his wife".[81] Hutton and Davies note that folk healers were sometimes accused of witchcraft, but made up a minority of the accused.[65][82] It is also possible that a small proportion of accused witches may have genuinely sought to harm by magical means.[83]

Éva Pócs writes that reasons for accusations of witchcraft fall into four general categories:[24]

  1. A person was caught in the act of positive or negative sorcery
  2. A well-meaning sorcerer or healer lost their clients' or the authorities' trust
  3. A person did nothing more than gain the enmity of their neighbors
  4. A person was reputed to be a witch and surrounded with an aura of witch-beliefs or occultism.

Witch-hunts and witch-trials Edit

In China Edit

During the reign of Emperor Wu of Han (141 BCE to 87 BCE) in the Western Han Dynasty of China, there were instances where the imperial court took measures to suppress certain religious or spiritual practices, including those associated with shamanism. Emperor Wu was known for his strong support of Confucianism, which was the dominant ideology of the Han Dynasty, and he promoted policies that aimed to consolidate central authority and unify the cultural and social landscape of the empire.[84]

One notable event related to the suppression of shamanism occurred in 91 BCE, when Emperor Wu issued an edict that banned a range of "heterodox" practices, including shamanistic rituals and divination, in favor of Confucianism. The primary target of these measures was the Wuism or Wu (巫) tradition, which involved the worship of spirits and the use of shamanic practices to communicate with them. Wuism was considered by the Confucian elite to be superstitious witchcraft and at odds with Confucian principles.[85]

Emperor Wu's suppression of shamanism was part of a larger effort to centralize power, promote Confucian ethics, and standardize cultural practices. While the ban on shamanistic practices did impact certain communities and religious groups, these measures were not universally applied across the vast territory of the empire. Local variations and practices persisted in some regions despite imperial edicts.[84]

The historical record from that time is limited, and our understanding of these events can be influenced by the perspectives of the Confucian scholars and officials who documented them. As a result, there might be some variations in the interpretation of the exact nature and extent of the expulsion of shamans and other religious practitioners during Emperor Wu's reign.[84]

In Europe Edit

 
A 1613 English pamphlet showing "Witches apprehended, examined and executed"

In Christianity, sorcery came to be associated with heresy and apostasy and to be viewed as evil. Among Catholics, Protestants, and the secular leadership of late medieval/early modern Europe, fears about witchcraft rose to fever pitch and sometimes led to large-scale witch-hunts. The fifteenth century saw a dramatic rise in awareness and terror of witchcraft. Tens of thousands of people were executed, and others were imprisoned, tortured, banished, and had lands and possessions confiscated. The majority of those accused were women, though in some regions the majority were men.[86][87] In Scots, the word warlock came to be used as the male equivalent of witch (which can be male or female, but is used predominantly for females).[88][89][90]

The Malleus Maleficarum (Latin for 'Hammer of The Witches') was a witch-hunting manual written in 1486 by two German monks, Heinrich Kramer and Jacob Sprenger. It was used by both Catholics and Protestants[91] for several hundred years, outlining how to identify a witch, what makes a woman more likely than a man to be a witch, how to put a witch on trial, and how to punish a witch. The book defines a witch as evil and typically female. It became the handbook for secular courts throughout Europe, but was not used by the Inquisition, which even cautioned against relying on it.[92] It was the most sold book in Europe for over 100 years, after the Bible.[93]

From the sixteenth century on, there were some writers who protested against witch trials, witch hunting and the belief that witchcraft existed. Among them were Johann Weyer, Reginald Scot,[94] and Friedrich Spee.[95] European witch-trials reached their peak in the early 17th century, after which popular sentiment began to turn against the practice. In 1682, King Louis XIV prohibited further witch-trials in France. In 1736, Great Britain formally ended witch-trials with passage of the Witchcraft Act.[96]

Modern witch-hunts Edit

Belief in witchcraft continues to be present today in some societies and accusations of witchcraft are the trigger for serious forms of violence, including murder. Such incidents are common in countries such as Burkina Faso, Ghana, India, Kenya, Malawi, Nepal and Tanzania. Accusations of witchcraft are sometimes linked to personal disputes, jealousy, and conflicts between neighbors or family members over land or inheritance. Witchcraft-related violence is often discussed as a serious issue in the broader context of violence against women.[97][98][99][100][101] In Tanzania, about 500 old women are murdered each year following accusations of witchcraft or accusations of being a witch.[102] Apart from extrajudicial violence, state-sanctioned violence also occurs in some jurisdictions. For instance, in Saudi Arabia practicing witchcraft and sorcery is a crime punishable by death and the country has executed people for this crime in 2011, 2012 and 2014.[103][104][105]

Children who live in some regions of the world, such as parts of Africa, are also vulnerable to violence that is related to witchcraft accusations.[106][107][108][109] Such incidents have also occurred in immigrant communities in the UK, including the much publicized case of the murder of Victoria Climbié.[110][111]

By region Edit

Africa Edit

 
An Azande witch doctor, who is believed to cure bewitchment

African witchcraft encompasses various beliefs and practices. These beliefs often play a significant role in shaping social dynamics and can influence how communities address challenges and seek spiritual assistance. Much of what witchcraft represents in Africa has been susceptible to misunderstandings and confusion, thanks in no small part to a tendency among western scholars since the time of the now largely discredited Margaret Murray to approach the subject through a comparative lens vis-a-vis European witchcraft.[112]

While some colonialists tried to eradicate witch hunting by introducing legislation to prohibit accusations of witchcraft, some of the countries where this was the case have formally recognized the existence of witchcraft via the law. This has produced an environment that encourages persecution of suspected witches.[113]

In Cameroon among the Maka people, witchcraft is known as "djambe" and encompasses occult, transformative, killing, and healing aspects.[114] In the Central African Republic, hundreds of people are convicted of witchcraft annually, with reports of violent acts against accused women.[115] The Democratic Republic of the Congo witnessed a disturbing trend of child witchcraft accusations in Kinshasa, leading to abuse and exorcisms supervised by self-styled pastors.[116] Ghana grapples with accusations against women, leading to the existence of witch camps where accused individuals can seek refuge, though the government plans to close them.[117]

In Kenya, there have been reports of mobs burning people accused of witchcraft, reflecting the deep-seated beliefs in the supernatural.[118] Malawi faces a similar issue of child witchcraft accusations, with traditional healers and some Christian counterparts involved in exorcisms, causing abandonment and abuse of children.[119] In Nigeria, Pentecostal pastors have intertwined Christianity with witchcraft beliefs for profit, leading to the torture and killing of accused children.[120] Sierra Leone's Mende people see witchcraft convictions as beneficial, as the accused receive support and care from the community.[121]

Lastly, in Zulu culture, healers known as sangomas protect people from witchcraft and evil spirits through divination and ancestral connections.[122] However, concerns arise regarding the training and authenticity of some sangomas.

Americas Edit

North America Edit

British America and the United States Edit
Massachusetts Edit
 
Examination of a Witch by T. H. Matteson, inspired by the Salem witch trials

In 1645, Springfield, Massachusetts, experienced America's first accusations of witchcraft when husband and wife Hugh and Mary Parsons accused each other of witchcraft. At America's first witch trial, Hugh was found innocent, while Mary was acquitted of witchcraft but sentenced to be hanged for the death of her child. She died in prison.[123]

In 1648 Margaret Jones (Puritan midwife) was the first person to be executed for witchcraft in Massachusetts Bay Colony. From 1645 to 1663, about eighty people throughout England's Massachusetts Bay Colony were accused of practicing witchcraft. Thirteen women and two men were executed in a witch-hunt that lasted throughout New England from 1645 to 1663.[124] The Salem witch trials followed in 1692–93. These witch trials were the most famous in British North America and took place in the coastal settlements near Salem, Massachusetts. Prior to the witch trials, nearly three hundred men and women had been suspected of partaking in witchcraft, and nineteen of these people were hanged, and one was "pressed to death".[125]

Despite being generally known as the Salem witch trials, the preliminary hearings in 1692 were conducted in a variety of towns across the province: Salem Village (now Danvers), Salem Town, Ipswich, and Andover. The best-known trials were conducted by the Court of Oyer and Terminer in 1692 in Salem Town.[126][citation needed][127] The Crucible by Arthur Miller is a dramatized and partially fictionalized story of the Salem witch trials that took place in the Massachusetts Bay Colony during 1692–93.

Maryland Edit

In Maryland, there is a legend of Moll Dyer, who escaped a fire set by fellow colonists only to die of exposure in December 1697. The historical record of Dyer is scant as all official records were burned in a courthouse fire, though the county courthouse has on display the rock where her frozen body was found. A letter from a colonist of the period describes her in most unfavourable terms. A local road is named after Dyer, where her homestead was said to have been. Many local families have their own version of the Moll Dyer affair, and her name is spoken with care in the rural southern counties.[128]

Pennsylvania Edit

Margaret Mattson and another woman were tried in 1683 on accusations of witchcraft in the Province of Pennsylvania. They were acquitted by William Penn after a trial in Philadelphia. These are the only known trials for witchcraft in Pennsylvania history.

Some of Margaret's neighbors claimed that she had bewitched cattle.[129] Charges of practicing witchcraft were brought before the Pennsylvania Provincial Council in February 1683 (under Julian calendar).[130] This occurred nineteen years after the Swedish territory became a British common law colony and subject to English Witchcraft Act 1604.[131] Accused by several neighbors, as well as her own daughter in law, Mattson's alleged crimes included making threats against neighbors, causing cows to give little milk,[132] bewitching and killing livestock and appearing to witnesses in spectral form. On February 27, 1683, charges against Mattson and a neighbor Gertro (a.k.a. Yeshro) Jacobsson, wife of Hendrick Jacobsson, were brought by the Attorney General before a grand jury of 21 men overseen by the colony's proprietor, William Penn. The grand jury returned a true bill indictment that afternoon, and the cases proceeded to trial.[130] A petit jury of twelve men was selected by Penn and an interpreter was appointed for the Finnish women, who did not speak English.[133] Penn barred the use of prosecution and defense lawyers, conducted the questioning himself, and permitted the introduction of unsubstantiated hearsay.[132] Penn himself gave the closing charge and directions to the jury, but what he told them was not transcribed. According to the minutes of the Provincial Council, dated February 27, 1683, the jury returned with a verdict of "Guilty of having the Comon Fame of a Witch, but not Guilty in manner and Forme as Shee stands Endicted."[132][134]

Thus Mattson was found guilty of having the reputation of a witch, but not guilty of bewitching animals. Neither woman was convicted of witchcraft. "Hence the superstitious got enough to have their thinking affirmed. Those less superstitious, and justice minded, got what they wanted."[135] The accused were released on their husbands' posting recognizance bonds of 50 pounds and promising six months' good behavior.[136][130]

A popular legend tells of William Penn dismissing the charges against Mattson by affirming her legal right to fly on a broomstick over Philadelphia, saying "Well, I know of no law against it."[132] The record fails to show any such commentary, but the story probably reflects popular views of Penn's socially progressive Quaker values.[137]

Tennessee Edit

Accusations of witchcraft and wizardry led to the prosecution of a man in Tennessee as recently as 1833.[138][139][140]

Native Americans in the United States Edit

Native American communities such as the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Creek, Delaware, Hopi, Miami, Natchez, Navajo and Seneca have historically defined witches as evil-doers who harm their own communities. Witches are traditionally seen as criminals, and witchcraft as a crime punishable by death, if nothing else as a last resort.[141][142][143] While some communities have passed laws specifically outlawing vigilante killings, traditional views of witches and witchcraft have largely remained the same into 20th century,[141] and through to the present among traditionals.[143]

Witches in these communities are defined in contrast to medicine people, who are the healers and ceremonial leaders, and who provide protection against witches and witchcraft.[141][142]

Cherokee Edit

The Cherokee have traditional monster stories of witches, such as Raven Mocker (Kâ'lanû Ahkyeli'skï) and Spearfinger (U'tlun'ta), both known as dangerous killers.[144][145]

Among the Cherokee, the medicine people are seen as a "priesthood caste",[146] known to work together in groups to help the community. As in other Native communities, they are defined as the opposite of witches, who are seen as criminals,[141]

In contrast, the traditional Cherokee witch lives alone, eats alone (fearful of being poisoned), and commits heinous acts alone, surreptitiously under the cover of darkness. Jealous and hypersensitive by nature, the Cherokee witch lives in the ever-fearful grip of being publicly exposed.[141]

Cherokee healers have "doctored" dogs so the dogs can help them detect witches.[141]

As in the other tribes that have agreed to talk to anthropologists, witchcraft has been traditionally punished by death in Cherokee communities. In 1824 the western Cherokee passed new laws "forbidding the wanton killing of suspected witches",[147] however, this attitude and retribution appears to have continued at the same rate in both the Cherokee and Creek communities throughout the 19th Century.[147] In the twentieth century, many communities responded to allegations of witchcraft with mental health treatment, including medication. But despite changes in laws and perspectives, Kilpatrick (quoting Shimony (1989)) wrote in 1998 that one does still occasionally read about "the demise of a suspected witch in Native American communities" but that most of these deaths take place "only while the witch is in animal guise (by shooting) or by means of counter-witchcraft".[141]

Hopi Edit

The Hopi have many beliefs and concerns about witches and witchcraft.

To the Hopis, witches or evil-hearted persons deliberately try to destroy social harmony by sowing discontent, doubt, and criticism through evil gossip as well as by actively combating medicine men.[143]

Suspicious deaths are often blamed on witchcraft, with members of the community trying to figure out who might be a witch, and who might have caused the death or other misfortune.[143]

They are called popwaqt, the plural of powaqa, "witch" or "sorcerer." They are unequivocally evil, casting spells, causing illness, killing babies, and destroying the life cycle. They practice powaqqatsi, the "life of evil sorcery." The Hopis call them kwitavi, "shit people."

....

a witch is a person who kills close family relatives in order to prolong his or her own life by four years. By killing, I mean causing through occult means an unnatural death, such as stillbirth, infants dying of ordinary illnesses, or healthy adults suffering from strange illnesses. Witches are also the occult cause of unusual circumstances, such as hailstorms on a sunny day, extreme drought, or people suffering bad fortune.[143]

Navajo Edit

There are several varieties of those considered to be witches by the Navajo. The most common variety seen in horror fiction by non-Navajo people is the yee naaldlooshii (a type of 'ánti'įhnii),[148] known in English as the skin-walker. They are believed to take the forms of animals in order to travel in secret and do harm to the innocent.[148] In the Navajo language, yee naaldlooshii translates to 'with it, he goes on all fours'.[148] Corpse powder or corpse poison (Navajo: áńt'į́, literally 'witchery' or 'harming') is a substance made from powdered corpses. The powder is used by witches to curse their victims.[5] Traditional Navajos usually hesitate to discuss things like witches and witchcraft with non-Navajos.[149] As with other traditional cultures, the term "witch" is never used for healers or others who help the community with their ceremonies and spiritual work.[142]

Latin America Edit

When Franciscan friars from New Spain arrived in the Americas in 1524, they introduced Diabolism—belief in the Christian Devil—to the Indigenous peoples of the Americas.[150] Bartolomé de las Casas believed that human sacrifice was not diabolic, in fact far off from it, and was a natural result of religious expression.[150] Mexican Indians gladly took in the belief of Diabolism and still managed to keep their belief in creator-destroyer deities.[151]

Witchcraft was an important part of the social and cultural history of late-Colonial Mexico, during the Mexican Inquisition. Spanish Inquisitors viewed witchcraft as a problem that could be cured simply through confession. Yet, as anthropologist Ruth Behar writes, witchcraft, not only in Mexico but in Latin America in general, was a "conjecture of sexuality, witchcraft, and religion, in which Spanish, indigenous, and African cultures converged."[152] Furthermore, witchcraft in Mexico generally required an interethnic and interclass network of witches.[153] Yet, according to anthropology professor Laura Lewis, witchcraft in colonial Mexico ultimately represented an "affirmation of hegemony" for women, Indians, and especially Indian women over their white male counterparts as a result of the casta system.[154]

The presence of the witch is a constant in the ethnographic history of colonial Brazil, especially during the several denunciations and confessions given to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith of Bahia (1591–1593), Pernambuco and Paraíba (1593–1595).[155]

Brujería, often called a Latin American form of witchcraft, is a syncretic Afro-Caribbean tradition that combines Indigenous religious and magical practices from Aruba, Bonaire, and Curaçao in the Dutch Caribbean, Catholicism, and European witchcraft.[156] The tradition and terminology is considered to encompass both helpful and harmful practices.[157] A male practitioner is called a brujo, a female practitioner, a bruja.[157] Healers may be further distinguished by the terms kurioso or kuradó, a man or woman who performs trabou chikí ("little works") and trabou grandi ("large treatments") to promote or restore health, bring fortune or misfortune, deal with unrequited love, and more serious concerns. Sorcery usually involves reference to an entity referred to as the almasola or homber chiki.[158]

Asia Edit

 
Okabe – The cat witch, by Utagawa Kuniyoshi

Asian witchcraft encompasses various types of witchcraft practices across Asia. In ancient times, magic played a significant role in societies such as ancient Egypt and Babylonia, as evidenced by historical records. In the Middle East, references to magic can be found in the Torah, where witchcraft is condemned due to its association with belief in magic.

In the New Testament, both Galatians and Revelation condemn sorcery, though there is debate over the exact meaning of the Greek term "pharmakeía". Islamic beliefs incorporate divination and magic, including black magic, with the Quran offering protection against malevolent forces. Miracles in Islam are attributed to angels and pious individuals, distinct from witchcraft.

Judaism views witchcraft as tied to idolatry and necromancy, and although some rabbis practiced magic, it was often seen as divine intervention rather than witchcraft. In Nepal, accusations of witchcraft result in severe mistreatment of women, leading to societal marginalization and even death. India has seen incidents of witchcraft-related violence and murder, often targeting women accused of being witches.

In Chinese culture, the practice of "Gong Tau" involves black magic for purposes such as revenge and financial assistance. Japanese folklore features witch figures who employ foxes as familiars. Korean history includes instances of individuals being condemned for using spells. The Philippines has its own tradition of witches, distinct from Western portrayals, with their practices often countered by indigenous shamans.

Overall, witchcraft beliefs and practices in Asia vary widely across cultures, reflecting historical, religious, and social contexts.

Europe Edit

Witchcraft in Europe between 500 and 1750 was believed to be a combination of sorcery and heresy. While sorcery attempts to produce negative supernatural effects through formulas and rituals, heresy is the Christian contribution to witchcraft in which an individual makes a pact with the Devil. In addition, heresy denies witches the recognition of important Christian values such as baptism, salvation, Christ, and sacraments.[159] The beginning of the witch accusations in Europe took place in the 14th and 15th centuries, but as the social disruptions of the 16th century took place, witchcraft trials intensified.[160]

 
A 1555 German print showing the burning of witches. Current scholarly estimates of the number of people executed for witchcraft in Europe vary between 40,000 and 100,000.[161] The number of witch trials in Europe known to have ended in executions is around 12,000.[162]

In Early Modern European tradition, witches were stereotypically, though not exclusively, women.[86][163] European pagan belief in witchcraft was associated with the goddess Diana and dismissed as "diabolical fantasies" by medieval Christian authors.[164] Throughout Europe, there were an estimated 110,000 witchcraft trials between 1450 and 1750 (with 1560 to 1660 being the peak of persecutions), with half of the cases seeing the accused being executed.[165] Witch-hunts first appeared in large numbers in southern France and Switzerland during the 14th and 15th centuries. The peak years of witch-hunts in southwest Germany were from 1561 to 1670.[166]

It was commonly believed that individuals with power and prestige were involved in acts of witchcraft and even cannibalism.[167] Because Europe had a lot of power over individuals living in West Africa, Europeans in positions of power were often accused of taking part in these practices. Though it is not likely that these individuals were actually involved in these practices, they were most likely associated due to Europe's involvement in things like the slave trade, which negatively affected the lives of many individuals in the Atlantic World throughout the fifteenth through seventeenth centuries.[167]

Early converts to Christianity looked to Christian clergy to work magic more effectively than the old methods under Roman paganism, and Christianity provided a methodology involving saints and relics, similar to the gods and amulets of the Pagan world. As Christianity became the dominant religion in Europe, its concern with magic lessened.[168]

The Protestant Christian explanation for witchcraft, such as those typified in the confessions of the Pendle witches, commonly involves a diabolical pact or at least an appeal to the intervention of the spirits of evil. The witches or wizards engaged in such practices were alleged to reject Jesus and the sacraments; observe "the witches' sabbath" (performing infernal rites that often parodied the Mass or other sacraments of the Church); pay Divine honour to the Prince of Darkness; and, in return, receive from him preternatural powers. It was a folkloric belief that a Devil's Mark, like the brand on cattle, was placed upon a witch's skin by the devil to signify that this pact had been made.[169]

Oceania Edit

Cook Islands Edit

In pre-Christian times, witchcraft was a common practice in the Cook Islands. The native name for a sorcerer was tangata purepure (a man who prays).[170] The prayers offered by the ta'unga (priests)[171] to the gods worshiped on national or tribal marae (temples) were termed karakia;[172] those on minor occasions to the lesser gods were named pure. All these prayers were metrical, and were handed down from generation to generation with the utmost care. There were prayers for every such phase in life; for success in battle; for a change in wind (to overwhelm an adversary at sea, or that an intended voyage be propitious); that his crops may grow; to curse a thief; or wish ill-luck and death to his foes. Few men of middle age were without a number of these prayers or charms. The succession of a sorcerer was from father to son, or from uncle to nephew. So too of sorceresses: it would be from mother to daughter, or from aunt to niece. Sorcerers and sorceresses were often slain by relatives of their supposed victims.[173]

A singular enchantment was employed to kill off a husband of a pretty woman desired by someone else. The expanded flower of a Gardenia was stuck upright—a very difficult performance—in a cup (i.e., half a large coconut shell) of water. A prayer was then offered for the husband's speedy death, the sorcerer earnestly watching the flower. Should it fall the incantation was successful. But if the flower still remained upright, he will live. The sorcerer would in that case try his skill another day, with perhaps better success.[174]

According to Beatrice Grimshaw, a journalist who visited the Cook Islands in 1907, the uncrowned Queen Makea was believed to have possessed the mystic power called mana, giving the possessor the power to slay at will. It also included other gifts, such as second sight to a certain extent, as well as the power to bring good or evil luck.[175]

Papua New Guinea Edit

A local newspaper informed that more than fifty people were killed in two Highlands provinces of Papua New Guinea in 2008 for allegedly practicing witchcraft.[176] An estimated 50–150 alleged witches are killed each year in Papua New Guinea.[177]

Demographics and surveys Edit

A 2022 study found that belief in witchcraft, as in the use of malevolent magic or powers, is still widespread in some parts of the world. It found that belief in witchcraft varied from 9% of people in some countries to 90% in others, and was linked to cultural and socioeconomic factors. Stronger belief in witchcraft correlated with poorer economic development, weak institutions, lower levels of education, lower life expectancy, lower life satisfaction, and high religiosity.[178][179]

It contrasted two hypotheses about future changes in witchcraft belief:[179]

  • witchcraft beliefs should decline "in the process of development due to improved security and health, lower exposure to shocks, spread of education and scientific approach to explaining life events" according to standard modernization theory
  • "some aspects of development, namely rising inequality, globalization, technological change, and migration, may instead revive witchcraft beliefs by disrupting established social order" according to literature largely inspired by observations from Sub-Saharan Africa.

In the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Russian state media claimed that Ukraine was using black magic against the Russian military, specifically accusing Oleksiy Arestovych of enlisting sorcerers and witches as well as Ukrainian soldiers of consecrating weapons "with blood magick".[180][181]

Neopagan Witchcraft Edit

During the 20th century, interest in witchcraft rose in English-speaking and European countries. From the 1920s, Margaret Murray popularized the 'witch-cult hypothesis': the idea that those persecuted as 'witches' in early modern Europe were followers of a benevolent pagan religion that had survived the Christianization of Europe. This has been discredited by further historical research.[182][183]

From the 1930s, occult neopagan groups began to emerge who called their religion a kind of 'witchcraft'. They were initiatory secret societies inspired by Murray's 'witch cult' theory, ceremonial magic, Aleister Crowley's Thelema, and historical paganism.[184][185][186] The biggest religious movement to emerge from this is Wicca. They do not use the term 'witchcraft' in the traditional way, but instead define their practices as a kind of "positive magic".

Today, some Wiccans and members of related traditions self-identify as "witches" and use the term "witchcraft" for their magico-religious beliefs and practices, primarily in Western anglophone countries.[17] Various forms of Wicca are now practised as a religion with positive ethical principles, organized into autonomous covens and led by a High Priesthood. A survey published in 2000 cited just over 200,000 people who reported practicing Wicca in the United States.[187] There is also an "Eclectic Wiccan" movement of individuals and groups who share key Wiccan beliefs but have no formal link with traditional Wiccan covens. Some Wiccan-inspired neopagans call their beliefs and practices "traditional witchcraft" or the "traditional craft" rather than Wicca.[188]

Witches in art and literature Edit

 
Albrecht Dürer c. 1500: Witch riding backwards on a goat

Witches have a long history of being depicted in art, although most of their earliest artistic depictions seem to originate in Early Modern Europe, particularly the Medieval and Renaissance periods. Many scholars attribute their manifestation in art as inspired by texts such as Canon Episcopi, a demonology-centered work of literature, and Malleus Maleficarum, a "witch-craze" manual published in 1487, by Heinrich Kramer and Jacob Sprenger.[189] Witches in fiction span a wide array of characterizations. They are typically, but not always, female, and generally depicted as either villains or heroines.[190]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^
    • Hutton, Ronald (2017). The Witch: A History of Fear, from Ancient Times to the Present. Yale University Press. p. ix. What is a witch? The standard scholarly definition of one was summed up in 1978 by a leading expert in the anthropology of religion, Rodney Needham, as 'someone who causes harm to others by mystical means'. In stating this, he was self-consciously not providing a personal view of the matter, but summing up an established scholarly consensus [...] When the only historian of the European trials to set them systematically in a global context in recent years, Wolfgang Behringer, undertook his task, he termed witchcraft 'a generic term for all kinds of evil magic and sorcery, as perceived by contemporaries'. Again, in doing so he was self-consciously perpetuating a scholarly norm. That usage has persisted till the present among anthropologists and historians [...] The [definition] discussed above seems still to be the most widespread and frequent. [...] The use of 'witch' to mean a worker of harmful magic has not only been used more commonly and generally, but seems to have been employed by those with a genuine belief in magic...
    • Thomas, Keith (1997). Religion and the Decline of Magic. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 519. ISBN 978-0297002208. 'At this day', wrote Reginald Scot in 1584, 'it is indifferent to say in the English tongue, "she is a witch" or "she is a wise woman".' Nevertheless, it is possible to isolate that kind of 'witchcraft' which involved the employment (or presumed employment) of some occult means of doing harm to other people in a way which was generally disapproved of. In this sense the belief in witchcraft can be defined as the attribution of misfortune to occult human agency. A witch was a person of either sex (but more often female) who could mysteriously injure other people.
    • Gershman, Boris (23 November 2022). "Witchcraft beliefs around the world: An exploratory analysis". PLOS ONE. 17 (11): e0276872. Bibcode:2022PLoSO..1776872G. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0276872. PMC 9683553. PMID 36417350. Beliefs in witchcraft, defined as an ability of certain people to intentionally cause harm via supernatural means, have been documented all over the world, both recently and in the distant past. [...] This paper presents a new global dataset on contemporary witchcraft beliefs that covers countries and territories representing roughly one half of the world's adult population. The data reveal that, far from being a remnant of the past limited to small isolated communities, witchcraft beliefs are highly widespread throughout the modern world. At the same time, there are significant differences in their prevalence within and across nations...
    • "Witchcraft". Oxford Bibliographies Online. Witchcraft refers to a belief in the perpetration of harm by persons through mystical means. [...] Ethnographic studies across the globe have shown that, far from being confined to the distant past of Europe and New England, the belief in witchcraft is widely distributed in time and place—in Africa, Melanesia, the Pacific, Asia, and the Americas. ... The most commonly accepted definition was provided in Evans-Pritchard 1937 [...] Evans-Pritchard defines the former as the innate, inherited ability to cause misfortune or death.
    • Stein, Rebecca; Stein, Philip (2017). The Anthropology of Religion, Magic, and Witchcraft. Taylor & Francis. pp. 233–234, 244, 248. When anthropologists speak of witchcraft, they generally refer to individuals who have an innate ability to do evil. [...] The idea of witchcraft as an evil force bringing misfortune to members of a community is found in a great number of societies throughout the world. In these societies witchcraft is evil; there are no good witches. [...] As is common in many societies throughout the world, those accused of witchcraft were primarily people living on the fringes of society. Many were marginalized and powerless women without husbands, brothers, or sons to protect their interests. Others were those who dealt with folk remedies and midwifery. 'When such remedies went bad, and when face-to-face dispute resolution failed, the customers who paid for the cures or the potions might conclude that the purveyor was at fault'. [...] [In some popular media] witches are portrayed in a very positive light, which fits only the Wiccan definition.
    • Singh, Manvir (2 February 2021). "Magic, Explanations, and Evil: The Origins and Design of Witches and Sorcerers". Current Anthropology. 62 (1): 2–29. doi:10.1086/713111. ISSN 0011-3204. S2CID 232214522. from the original on 18 July 2021. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
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Works cited Edit

  • Cai, L. (2014). Witchcraft and the Rise of the First Confucian Empire. State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-1438448497.
  • Gittins, Anthony J. (1987). "Mende Religion". Studia Instituti Anthropos. Nettetal: Steyler Verlag. 41.
  • Janzen, John M.; MacGaffey, Wyatt (1974). "An Anthology of Kongo Religion: Primary Texts from Lower Zaïre". University of Kansas Publications in Anthropology. Lawrence (5).
  • Pócs, É. (1999). Between the Living and the Dead: A Perspective on Witches and Seers in the Early Modern Age. Hungary: Central European University Press. ISBN 978-9639116191.

Further reading Edit

  • Boyer, Paul and Stephen Nissenbaum, eds. The Salem Witchcraft Papers: Verbatim Transcripts of the Legal Documents of the Salem Witchcraft Outbreak of 1692, Volumes I and II. New York: Da Capo Press, 1977.[ISBN missing]
  • Bristol, J. C. (2007). Christians, Blasphemers, and Witches: Afro-Mexican Ritual Practice in the Seventeenth Century. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
  • Davies, O. (2013). America Bewitched: The Story of Witchcraft After Salem. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Epstein, I. (2008). The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Children's Issues Worldwide. Greenwood Press.
  • Ginzburg, Carlo; Translated by Raymond Rosenthal (2004) [Originally published in Italy as Storia Notturna (1989 Giulio Einaudi)]. Ecstasies: Deciphering the Witches' Sabbath. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226296937.
  • Goss, D. K. (2008). The Salem witch trials. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.[ISBN missing]
  • Hall, David, ed. Witch-hunting in Seventeenth-century New England: A Documentary History, 1638–1692. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1991.
  • Hill, F. (2000). The Salem witch trials reader. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press.[ISBN missing]
  • Hyatt, Harry Middleton. Hoodoo, conjuration, witchcraft, rootwork: beliefs accepted by many Negroes and white persons, these being orally recorded among Blacks and whites. s.n., 1970.[ISBN missing]
  • Kent, Elizabeth. "Masculinity and Male Witches in Old and New England." History Workshop 60 (2005): 69–92.
  • Levack, Brian P. ed. The Oxford Handbook of Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe and Colonial America (2013) excerpt and text search
  • Lima, R. (2005). Stages of Evil: Occultism in Western Theater and Drama. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0813123622.
  • Mann, B. A. (2000). Iroquoian Women: The Gantowisas. Peter Lang. ISBN 9780820441535 pp. 319–20.
  • Murray, D. (2013). Matter, Magic, and Spirit: Representing Indian and African American Belief. University of Pennsylvania Press.
  • Narby, J. (1998). The Cosmic Serpent: DNA and the Origins of Knowledge. TarcherPerigee.
  • Pentikainen, J (1978). "Marina Takalo as an Individual in Oral Repertoire and World View. An Anthropological study of Marina Takalo's Life History". F. F. Communications Turku. 93 (219): 58–76. INIST:12698358.
  • Pentikainen, Juha. "The Supernatural Experience." F. Jstor. 26 February 2007.
  • Rasbold, K. (2019). Crossroads of Conjure: The Roots and Practices of Granny Magic, Hoodoo, Brujería, and Curanderismo. Llewellyn Worldwide.
  • Richards, J. (2019). Backwoods Witchcraft: Conjure & Folk Magic from Appalachia. Weiser Books.
  • Ruickbie, Leo (2004) Witchcraft out of the Shadows: A History, London, Robert Hale.[ISBN missing]
  • Williams, Howard (1865). The Superstitions of Witchcraft. London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, & Green – via Project Gutenberg.

External links Edit

  • Witchcraft on In Our Time at the BBC
  • Kabbalah On Witchcraft – A Jewish view (Audio) chabad.org
  • Jewish Encyclopedia: Witchcraft

witchcraft, this, article, about, worldwide, historical, traditional, views, witchcraft, overview, neopagan, witchcraft, neopagan, witchcraft, modern, pagan, religion, wicca, other, uses, disambiguation, witch, redirects, here, other, uses, witch, disambiguati. This article is about worldwide historical and traditional views of witchcraft For an overview of Neopagan witchcraft see Neopagan witchcraft For the modern pagan religion see Wicca For other uses see Witchcraft disambiguation Witch redirects here For other uses see Witch disambiguation Witchcraft as most commonly understood in both historical and present day communities is the use of alleged supernatural powers of magic A witch from Old English wicce f wicca m is a practitioner of witchcraft Traditionally witchcraft means the use of magic or supernatural powers to inflict harm or misfortune on others and this remains the most common and widespread meaning 1 According to Encyclopedia Britannica Witchcraft thus defined exists more in the imagination of contemporaries than in any objective reality Yet this stereotype has a long history and has constituted for many cultures a viable explanation of evil in the world 2 The belief in witchcraft has been found in a great number of societies worldwide Anthropologists have applied the English term witchcraft to similar beliefs in occult practices in many different cultures and societies that have adopted the English language have often internalised the term 3 4 5 The Witches by Hans Baldung woodcut 1508In medieval and early modern Europe where belief in witchcraft traces back to classical antiquity accused witches were usually women who were believed to have used black magic maleficium against their own community and often to have communed with evil beings though British anthropologist Jean La Fontaine notes that the stereotype of evil appears not to have been closely connected to the actions of real people except when it was mobilised against the current enemies of the Church 6 Usually accusations of witchcraft were made by their neighbors and followed from social tensions It was thought witchcraft could be thwarted by protective magic or counter magic which could be provided by the cunning folk or wise people Suspected witches were also intimidated banished attacked or killed Often they would be formally prosecuted and punished if found guilty or simply believed to be guilty European witch hunts and witch trials in the early modern period led to tens of thousands of executions While magical healers and midwives were sometimes accused of witchcraft themselves 7 8 9 10 they made up a minority of those accused European belief in witchcraft gradually dwindled during and after the Age of Enlightenment Many Indigenous communities that believe in the existence of witchcraft likewise define witches as malevolent and seek healers and medicine people for protection against witchcraft 11 12 Some African and Melanesian peoples believe witches are driven by an evil spirit or substance inside them Modern witch hunting takes place in parts of Africa and Asia By contrast other indigenous groups view witchcraft in other ways including as a method of preserving cultural knowledge 13 14 15 16 verification needed Today some followers of Wiccan related neo paganism self identify as witches and use the term witchcraft for their magico religious beliefs and practices see Neopagan Witchcraft primarily in Western anglophone countries 17 18 19 Other neo pagans avoid the term due to its negative connotations 20 Contents 1 Concept 2 Etymology 3 Practices 4 Historical and religious perspectives 4 1 Near East beliefs 4 2 Abrahamic religions 4 3 Ancient Roman world 5 Witchcraft and folk healers 6 Thwarting witchcraft 6 1 Accusations of witchcraft 6 2 Witch hunts and witch trials 6 2 1 In China 6 2 2 In Europe 6 3 Modern witch hunts 7 By region 7 1 Africa 7 2 Americas 7 2 1 North America 7 2 1 1 British America and the United States 7 2 1 1 1 Massachusetts 7 2 1 1 2 Maryland 7 2 1 1 3 Pennsylvania 7 2 1 1 4 Tennessee 7 2 1 2 Native Americans in the United States 7 2 1 2 1 Cherokee 7 2 1 2 2 Hopi 7 2 1 2 3 Navajo 7 2 2 Latin America 7 3 Asia 7 4 Europe 7 5 Oceania 7 5 1 Cook Islands 7 5 2 Papua New Guinea 8 Demographics and surveys 9 Neopagan Witchcraft 10 Witches in art and literature 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Works cited 13 Further reading 14 External linksConcept EditThe concept of witchcraft and the belief in its existence have persisted throughout recorded history According to the Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial Summary or Arbitrary Executions s 2009 Report there is difficulty of defining witches and witchcraft across cultures terms that quite apart from their connotations in popular culture may include an array of traditional or faith healing practices and are not easily defined 4 The concept of malevolent magic has been found among cultures worldwide 3 21 and it is prominent in some cultures today 22 Most societies have believed in and feared an ability by some individuals to cause supernatural harm and misfortune to others This may come from mankind s tendency to want to assign occurrences of remarkable good or bad luck to agency either human or superhuman 23 Historian Ronald Hutton says Malevolent magic is however only one current usage of the word In fact Anglo American senses of it now take at least four different forms although the one discussed above seems still to be the most widespread and frequent The others define the witch figure as any person who uses magic or as the practitioner of nature based Pagan religion or as a symbol of independent female authority and resistance to male domination All have validity in the present and to call anybody wrong for using any one of them would be to reveal oneself as bereft of general knowledge as well as scholarship 23 Historians and anthropologists see the concept of witchcraft as one of the ways humans have tried to explain strange misfortune 23 24 Some cultures have feared witchcraft much less than others because they tend to have other explanations for strange misfortune for example that it was caused by gods spirits demons or fairies or by other humans who have unwittingly cast the evil eye 23 For example the Gaels of Ireland and the Scottish Highlands historically held a strong belief in fairy folk who could cause supernatural harm and witch hunting was very rare in these regions compared to other regions of the British Isles 25 Hutton outlined five key characteristics ascribed to witches and witchcraft by most cultures that believe in the concept Traditionally witchcraft was believed to be the use of magic to cause harm or misfortune to others it was used by the witch against their own community it was seen as immoral and often thought to involve communion with evil beings powers of witchcraft were believed to have been acquired through inheritance or initiation and witchcraft could be thwarted by defensive magic persuasion intimidation or physical punishment of the alleged witch 26 Historically the Christian concept of witchcraft derives from Old Testament laws against it In medieval and early modern Europe many common folk who were Christians believed in magic As opposed to the helpful magic of the cunning folk witchcraft was seen as evil and associated with the Devil and Devil worship This often resulted in deaths torture and scapegoating casting blame for misfortune 27 28 and many years of large scale witch trials and witch hunts especially in Protestant Europe before largely ending during the European Age of Enlightenment Christian views in the modern day are diverse and cover the gamut of views from intense belief and opposition especially by Christian fundamentalists to non belief Many cultures worldwide continue to have a belief in the concept of witchcraft or malevolent magic During the Age of Colonialism many cultures were exposed to the modern Western world via colonialism usually accompanied and often preceded by intensive Christian missionary activity see Christianization In these cultures beliefs about witchcraft were partly influenced by the prevailing Western concepts of the time Witch hunts scapegoating and the killing or shunning of suspected witches still occur in the modern era 29 Suspicion of modern medicine due to beliefs about illness being caused by witchcraft continues in many countries with serious healthcare consequences HIV AIDS 30 and Ebola 31 are two examples of often lethal infectious disease epidemics whose medical care and containment has been severely hampered by regional beliefs in witchcraft Other severe medical conditions whose treatment is hampered in this way include tuberculosis leprosy epilepsy and the common severe bacterial Buruli ulcer 32 33 From the mid 20th century Witchcraft was adopted as the name of some neo pagan movements including religions such as Wicca 34 Its creators believed in the witch cult theory that accused witches had actually been followers of a surviving pagan religion but this witch cult theory is now discredited 35 Etymology EditFurther information Witch word The word is over a thousand years old Old English formed the compound wiccecraeft from wicce witch and craeft craft 36 The masculine form was wicca male sorcerer 37 According to the Oxford English Dictionary wicce and wicca were probably derived from the Old English verb wiccian meaning to practice witchcraft 38 Wiccian has a cognate in Middle Low German wicken attested from the 13th century The further etymology of this word is problematic It has no clear cognates in other Germanic languages outside of English and Low German and there are numerous possibilities for the Indo European root from which it may have derived Another Old English word for witch was haegtes or haegtesse which became the modern English word hag and is linked to the word hex In most other Germanic languages their word for witch comes from the same root as these for example German Hexe and Dutch heks 39 In colloquial modern English the word witch is generally used for women A male practitioner of magic or witchcraft is more commonly called a wizard or sometimes warlock When the word witch is used to refer to a member of a neo pagan tradition or religion such as Wicca it can refer to a person of any gender 40 Practices Edit nbsp Preparation for the Witches Sabbath by David Teniers the Younger It shows a witch brewing a potion overlooked by her familiar spirit or a demon items on the floor for casting a spell and another witch reading from a grimoire while anointing the buttocks of a young witch about to fly upon an inverted besom The historical and traditional definition of witchcraft is the use of black magic maleficium or supernatural powers to cause harm and misfortune to others Where belief in harmful magic exists it is typically forbidden by law as well as hated and feared by the general populace while helpful magic is tolerated or even accepted wholesale by the people even if the orthodox establishment opposes it 41 It is commonly believed that witches use objects words and gestures to cause supernatural harm or that they simply have an innate power to do so Hutton notes that both kinds of witches are often believed to exist in the same culture He says that the two often overlap in that someone with an inborn power could wield that power through material objects 42 In his 1937 study of Azande witchcraft beliefs E E Evans Pritchard reserved the term witchcraft for the actions of those who inflict harm by their inborn power and used sorcery for those who needed tools to do so 43 Historians found it difficult to apply to European witchcraft where witches were believed to use physical techniques as well as some who were believed to cause harm by thought alone 4 This distinction has now largely been abandoned although some anthropologists still sometimes find it relevant to the particular societies with which they are concerned 42 While most cultures believe witchcraft to be something willful some Indigenous peoples in Africa and Melanesia believe witches have a substance or an evil spirit in their bodies that drives them to do harm 42 Witches are commonly believed to cast curses a spell or set of magical words and gestures intended to inflict supernatural harm 44 As well as repeating words and gestures cursing could involve inscribing runes or sigils on an object to give that object magical powers burning or binding a wax or clay image a poppet of a person to affect them magically or using herbs animal parts and other substances to make potions or poisons 45 46 47 42 A common belief in cultures worldwide is that witches tend to use something from their victim s body to work black magic against them for example hair nail clippings clothing or bodily waste Such beliefs are found in Europe Africa South Asia Polynesia Melanesia and North America 42 Another widespread belief among Indigenous peoples in Africa and North America is that witches cause harm by introducing cursed magical objects into their victim s body such as small bones or ashes 42 In some cultures malevolent witches are believed to use human body parts in magic 42 and they are commonly believed to murder children for this purpose In Europe cases in which women did undoubtedly kill their children because of what today would be called postpartum psychosis were often interpreted as yielding to diabolical temptation 48 Witches are believed to work in secret sometimes alone and sometimes with other witches Hutton writes Across most of the world witches have been thought to gather at night when normal humans are inactive and also at their most vulnerable in sleep 42 In most cultures witches at these gatherings are thought to transgress social norms by engaging in cannibalism incest and open nudity 42 Another widespread belief is that witches have a demonic helper or familiar often in animal form Witches are also often thought to be able to shapeshift into animals themselves 49 Witchcraft has been blamed for many kinds of misfortune In Europe by far the most common kind of harm attributed to witchcraft was illness or death suffered by adults their children or their animals Certain ailments like impotence in men infertility in women and lack of milk in cows were particularly associated with witchcraft Illnesses that were poorly understood were more likely to be blamed on witchcraft Edward Bever writes Witchcraft was particularly likely to be suspected when a disease came on unusually swiftly lingered unusually long could not be diagnosed clearly or presented some other unusual symptoms 50 Necromancy is the practice of conjuring the spirits of the dead for divination or prophecy although the term has also been applied to raising the dead for other purposes The biblical Witch of Endor performed it 1 Samuel 28th chapter and it is among the witchcraft practices condemned by AElfric of Eynsham 51 52 53 Witches still go to cross roads and to heathen burials with their delusive magic and call to the devil and he comes to them in the likeness of the man that is buried there as if he arises from death 54 Historical and religious perspectives EditThe examples and perspective in this section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Near East beliefs Edit Main article Witchcraft in the Middle East The belief in sorcery and its practice seem to have been widespread in the ancient Near East and Nile Valley It played a conspicuous role in the cultures of ancient Egypt and in Babylonia The latter tradition included an Akkadian anti witchcraft ritual the Maqlu A section from the Code of Hammurabi about 2000 BC prescribes If a man has put a spell upon another man and it is not justified he upon whom the spell is laid shall go to the holy river into the holy river shall he plunge If the holy river overcome him and he is drowned the man who put the spell upon him shall take possession of his house If the holy river declares him innocent and he remains unharmed the man who laid the spell shall be put to death He that plunged into the river shall take possession of the house of him who laid the spell upon him 55 Abrahamic religions Edit Main articles Witchcraft and divination in the Hebrew Bible Christian views on magic and Islam and magic Witchcraft s historical evolution in the Middle East reveals a multi phase journey influenced by culture spirituality and societal norms Ancient witchcraft in the Near East intertwined mysticism with nature through rituals and incantations aligned with local beliefs In ancient Judaism magic had a complex relationship with some forms accepted due to mysticism 56 while others were considered heretical 57 The medieval Middle East experienced shifting perceptions of witchcraft under Islamic and Christian influences sometimes revered for healing and other times condemned as heresy Jewish attitudes toward witchcraft were rooted in its association with idolatry and necromancy and some rabbis even practiced certain forms of magic themselves 58 59 References to witchcraft in the Tanakh or Hebrew Bible highlighted strong condemnations rooted in the abomination of magical belief Christianity similarly condemned witchcraft considering it an abomination and even citing specific verses to justify witch hunting during the early modern period Islamic perspectives on magic encompass a wide range of practices 60 with belief in black magic and the evil eye coexisting alongside strict prohibitions against its practice 61 The Quran acknowledges the existence of magic and seeks protection from its harm Islam s stance is against the practice of magic considering it forbidden and emphasizes divine miracles rather than magic or witchcraft 62 The historical continuity of witchcraft in the Middle East underlines the complex interaction between spiritual beliefs and societal norms across different cultures and epochs Ancient Roman world Edit nbsp Caius Furius Cressinus Accused of Sorcery Jean Pierre Saint Ours 1792During the pagan era of ancient Rome there were laws against harmful magic 63 According to Pliny the 5th century BC laws of the Twelve Tables laid down penalties for uttering harmful incantations and for stealing the fruitfulness of someone else s crops by magic 63 The only recorded trial involving this law was that of Gaius Furius Cresimus 63 The Classical Latin word veneficium meant both poisoning and causing harm by magic such as magic potions although ancient people would not have distinguished between the two 64 In 331 BC a deadly epidemic hit Rome and at least 170 women were executed for causing it by veneficium In 184 180 BC another epidemic hit Italy and about 5 000 were executed for veneficium 64 If the reports are accurate writes Hutton then the Republican Romans hunted witches on a scale unknown anywhere else in the ancient world 64 Under the Lex Cornelia de sicariis et veneficis of 81 BC killing by veneficium carried the death penalty During the early Imperial era the Lex Cornelia began to be used more broadly against other kinds of magic 64 including sacrifices made for evil purposes The magicians were to be burnt at the stake 63 Witch characters women who work powerful evil magic appear in ancient Roman literature from the first century BC onward They are typically hags who chant harmful incantations make poisonous potions from herbs and the body parts of animals and humans sacrifice children raise the dead can control the natural world can shapeshift themselves and others into animals and invoke underworld deities and spirits They include Lucan s Erichtho Horace s Canidia Ovid s Dipsas and Apuleius s Meroe 64 Witchcraft and folk healers EditMain article Cunning folk nbsp Diorama of a cunning woman or wise woman in the Museum of Witchcraft and MagicTraditionally the terms witch and witchcraft mean those attempt to do harmful magic specifically harm done to the person s own community Most societies that have believed in witchcraft and black magic have also believed in helpful types of magic Some have termed positive magic white magic at least in more recent eras in English 65 Historian Owen Davies says the term white witch was rarely used before the 20th century 66 In these societies practitioners of helpful magic usually known as cunning folk have traditionally provided services such as breaking the effects of witchcraft healing divination finding lost or stolen goods and love magic 67 In Britain and some other places in Europe they have commonly been known as cunning folk or wise people 67 Alan McFarlane wrote in 1999 that while cunning folk is the usual name some are also known as blessers or wizards but might in some circumstances be known as white good or unbinding witches 68 Ronald Hutton uses the general term service magicians 67 Often these people were involved in identifying alleged witches 65 Such beneficial magic workers were normally contrasted with the witch who practised maleficium that is magic used for harmful ends 69 In the early years of the witch hunts the cunning folk were widely tolerated by church state and general populace 69 Some of the more hostile churchmen and secular authorities tried to smear folk healers and magic workers by falsely branding them witches and associating them with harmful witchcraft 67 but generally the masses did not accept this and continued to make use of their services 70 The English MP and skeptic Reginald Scot sought to disprove magic and witchcraft writing in The Discoverie of Witchcraft 1584 At this day it is indifferent to say in the English tongue she is a witch or she is a wise woman 71 Historian Keith Thomas adds Nevertheless it is possible to isolate that kind of witchcraft which involved the employment or presumed employment of some occult means of doing harm to other people in a way which was generally disapproved of In this sense the belief in witchcraft can be defined as the attribution of misfortune to occult human agency 8 Emma Wilby says folk magicians in Europe were viewed ambivalently by communities and were considered as capable of harming as of healing 72 which could lead to their being accused as using witchcraft to harm the innocent She suggests some English witches convicted of consorting with demons may have been cunning folk whose supposed fairy familiars had been demonised 73 Hutton says that healers and cunning folk were sometimes denounced as witches but seem to have made up a minority of the accused in any area studied 65 Likewise Davies says relatively few cunning folk were prosecuted under secular statutes for witchcraft and were dealt with more leniently than alleged witches The Constitutio Criminalis Carolina 1532 of the Holy Roman Empire and the Danish Witchcraft Act of 1617 stated that workers of folk magic should be dealt with differently from witches 74 It was suggested by Richard Horsley that cunning folk devins guerisseurs diviner healers made up a significant proportion of those tried for witchcraft in France and Switzerland but more recent surveys conclude that they made up less than 2 of the accused 75 However Eva Pocs says that half the accused witches in Hungary seem to have been healers 76 and Kathleen Stokker says the vast majority of Norway s accused witches were folk healers 77 Thwarting witchcraft EditThe examples and perspective in this section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp A witch bottle used as counter magic against witchcraftSocieties that believed in witchcraft also believed that it could be thwarted in various ways One common way was to use protective magic or counter magic of which the cunning folk were experts 65 This included charms talismans and amulets anti witch marks witch bottles witch balls and burying objects such as horse skulls inside the walls of buildings 78 Another believed cure for bewitchment was to persuade or force the alleged witch to lift their spell 65 Often people would attempt to thwart the witchcraft by physically punishing the alleged witch such as by banishing wounding torturing or killing them In most societies however a formal and legal remedy was preferred to this sort of private action whereby the alleged witch would be prosecuted and then formally punished if found guilty 65 This often resulted in execution Accusations of witchcraft Edit nbsp Alleged witches being accused in the Salem witch trialsThroughout the world accusations of witchcraft are often linked to social and economic tensions Females are most often accused but in some cultures it is mostly males In many societies accusations are directed mainly against the elderly but in others age is not a factor and in some cultures it is mainly adolescents who are accused 79 In pre modern Europe most of those accused were women and accusations of witchcraft usually came from their neighbors who accused them of inflicting harm or misfortune by magical means 80 Macfarlane found that women made accusations of witchcraft as much as men did Deborah Willis adds The number of witchcraft quarrels that began between women may actually have been higher in some cases it appears that the husband as head of household came forward to make statements on behalf of his wife 81 Hutton and Davies note that folk healers were sometimes accused of witchcraft but made up a minority of the accused 65 82 It is also possible that a small proportion of accused witches may have genuinely sought to harm by magical means 83 Eva Pocs writes that reasons for accusations of witchcraft fall into four general categories 24 A person was caught in the act of positive or negative sorcery A well meaning sorcerer or healer lost their clients or the authorities trust A person did nothing more than gain the enmity of their neighbors A person was reputed to be a witch and surrounded with an aura of witch beliefs or occultism Witch hunts and witch trials Edit In China Edit Main article Chinese shamanism During the reign of Emperor Wu of Han 141 BCE to 87 BCE in the Western Han Dynasty of China there were instances where the imperial court took measures to suppress certain religious or spiritual practices including those associated with shamanism Emperor Wu was known for his strong support of Confucianism which was the dominant ideology of the Han Dynasty and he promoted policies that aimed to consolidate central authority and unify the cultural and social landscape of the empire 84 One notable event related to the suppression of shamanism occurred in 91 BCE when Emperor Wu issued an edict that banned a range of heterodox practices including shamanistic rituals and divination in favor of Confucianism The primary target of these measures was the Wuism or Wu 巫 tradition which involved the worship of spirits and the use of shamanic practices to communicate with them Wuism was considered by the Confucian elite to be superstitious witchcraft and at odds with Confucian principles 85 Emperor Wu s suppression of shamanism was part of a larger effort to centralize power promote Confucian ethics and standardize cultural practices While the ban on shamanistic practices did impact certain communities and religious groups these measures were not universally applied across the vast territory of the empire Local variations and practices persisted in some regions despite imperial edicts 84 The historical record from that time is limited and our understanding of these events can be influenced by the perspectives of the Confucian scholars and officials who documented them As a result there might be some variations in the interpretation of the exact nature and extent of the expulsion of shamans and other religious practitioners during Emperor Wu s reign 84 In Europe Edit Main articles Witch hunt and Witch trials in the early modern period nbsp A 1613 English pamphlet showing Witches apprehended examined and executed In Christianity sorcery came to be associated with heresy and apostasy and to be viewed as evil Among Catholics Protestants and the secular leadership of late medieval early modern Europe fears about witchcraft rose to fever pitch and sometimes led to large scale witch hunts The fifteenth century saw a dramatic rise in awareness and terror of witchcraft Tens of thousands of people were executed and others were imprisoned tortured banished and had lands and possessions confiscated The majority of those accused were women though in some regions the majority were men 86 87 In Scots the word warlock came to be used as the male equivalent of witch which can be male or female but is used predominantly for females 88 89 90 The Malleus Maleficarum Latin for Hammer of The Witches was a witch hunting manual written in 1486 by two German monks Heinrich Kramer and Jacob Sprenger It was used by both Catholics and Protestants 91 for several hundred years outlining how to identify a witch what makes a woman more likely than a man to be a witch how to put a witch on trial and how to punish a witch The book defines a witch as evil and typically female It became the handbook for secular courts throughout Europe but was not used by the Inquisition which even cautioned against relying on it 92 It was the most sold book in Europe for over 100 years after the Bible 93 From the sixteenth century on there were some writers who protested against witch trials witch hunting and the belief that witchcraft existed Among them were Johann Weyer Reginald Scot 94 and Friedrich Spee 95 European witch trials reached their peak in the early 17th century after which popular sentiment began to turn against the practice In 1682 King Louis XIV prohibited further witch trials in France In 1736 Great Britain formally ended witch trials with passage of the Witchcraft Act 96 Modern witch hunts Edit Main article Modern witch hunts Belief in witchcraft continues to be present today in some societies and accusations of witchcraft are the trigger for serious forms of violence including murder Such incidents are common in countries such as Burkina Faso Ghana India Kenya Malawi Nepal and Tanzania Accusations of witchcraft are sometimes linked to personal disputes jealousy and conflicts between neighbors or family members over land or inheritance Witchcraft related violence is often discussed as a serious issue in the broader context of violence against women 97 98 99 100 101 In Tanzania about 500 old women are murdered each year following accusations of witchcraft or accusations of being a witch 102 Apart from extrajudicial violence state sanctioned violence also occurs in some jurisdictions For instance in Saudi Arabia practicing witchcraft and sorcery is a crime punishable by death and the country has executed people for this crime in 2011 2012 and 2014 103 104 105 Children who live in some regions of the world such as parts of Africa are also vulnerable to violence that is related to witchcraft accusations 106 107 108 109 Such incidents have also occurred in immigrant communities in the UK including the much publicized case of the murder of Victoria Climbie 110 111 By region EditThis section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why August 2021 Africa Edit Main article Witchcraft in Africa nbsp An Azande witch doctor who is believed to cure bewitchmentAfrican witchcraft encompasses various beliefs and practices These beliefs often play a significant role in shaping social dynamics and can influence how communities address challenges and seek spiritual assistance Much of what witchcraft represents in Africa has been susceptible to misunderstandings and confusion thanks in no small part to a tendency among western scholars since the time of the now largely discredited Margaret Murray to approach the subject through a comparative lens vis a vis European witchcraft 112 While some colonialists tried to eradicate witch hunting by introducing legislation to prohibit accusations of witchcraft some of the countries where this was the case have formally recognized the existence of witchcraft via the law This has produced an environment that encourages persecution of suspected witches 113 In Cameroon among the Maka people witchcraft is known as djambe and encompasses occult transformative killing and healing aspects 114 In the Central African Republic hundreds of people are convicted of witchcraft annually with reports of violent acts against accused women 115 The Democratic Republic of the Congo witnessed a disturbing trend of child witchcraft accusations in Kinshasa leading to abuse and exorcisms supervised by self styled pastors 116 Ghana grapples with accusations against women leading to the existence of witch camps where accused individuals can seek refuge though the government plans to close them 117 In Kenya there have been reports of mobs burning people accused of witchcraft reflecting the deep seated beliefs in the supernatural 118 Malawi faces a similar issue of child witchcraft accusations with traditional healers and some Christian counterparts involved in exorcisms causing abandonment and abuse of children 119 In Nigeria Pentecostal pastors have intertwined Christianity with witchcraft beliefs for profit leading to the torture and killing of accused children 120 Sierra Leone s Mende people see witchcraft convictions as beneficial as the accused receive support and care from the community 121 Lastly in Zulu culture healers known as sangoma s protect people from witchcraft and evil spirits through divination and ancestral connections 122 However concerns arise regarding the training and authenticity of some sangomas Americas Edit North America Edit It has been suggested that this section be split out into another article titled Witchcraft in North America Discuss August 2023 British America and the United States Edit See also Witchcraft in Colonial America Massachusetts Edit nbsp Examination of a Witch by T H Matteson inspired by the Salem witch trialsIn 1645 Springfield Massachusetts experienced America s first accusations of witchcraft when husband and wife Hugh and Mary Parsons accused each other of witchcraft At America s first witch trial Hugh was found innocent while Mary was acquitted of witchcraft but sentenced to be hanged for the death of her child She died in prison 123 In 1648 Margaret Jones Puritan midwife was the first person to be executed for witchcraft in Massachusetts Bay Colony From 1645 to 1663 about eighty people throughout England s Massachusetts Bay Colony were accused of practicing witchcraft Thirteen women and two men were executed in a witch hunt that lasted throughout New England from 1645 to 1663 124 The Salem witch trials followed in 1692 93 These witch trials were the most famous in British North America and took place in the coastal settlements near Salem Massachusetts Prior to the witch trials nearly three hundred men and women had been suspected of partaking in witchcraft and nineteen of these people were hanged and one was pressed to death 125 Despite being generally known as the Salem witch trials the preliminary hearings in 1692 were conducted in a variety of towns across the province Salem Village now Danvers Salem Town Ipswich and Andover The best known trials were conducted by the Court of Oyer and Terminer in 1692 in Salem Town 126 citation needed 127 The Crucible by Arthur Miller is a dramatized and partially fictionalized story of the Salem witch trials that took place in the Massachusetts Bay Colony during 1692 93 Maryland Edit Main article Maryland Witch Trials In Maryland there is a legend of Moll Dyer who escaped a fire set by fellow colonists only to die of exposure in December 1697 The historical record of Dyer is scant as all official records were burned in a courthouse fire though the county courthouse has on display the rock where her frozen body was found A letter from a colonist of the period describes her in most unfavourable terms A local road is named after Dyer where her homestead was said to have been Many local families have their own version of the Moll Dyer affair and her name is spoken with care in the rural southern counties 128 Pennsylvania Edit The template below Summarize section is being considered for merging See templates for discussion to help reach a consensus This section may be too long and excessively detailed Please consider summarizing the material August 2023 Margaret Mattson and another woman were tried in 1683 on accusations of witchcraft in the Province of Pennsylvania They were acquitted by William Penn after a trial in Philadelphia These are the only known trials for witchcraft in Pennsylvania history Some of Margaret s neighbors claimed that she had bewitched cattle 129 Charges of practicing witchcraft were brought before the Pennsylvania Provincial Council in February 1683 under Julian calendar 130 This occurred nineteen years after the Swedish territory became a British common law colony and subject to English Witchcraft Act 1604 131 Accused by several neighbors as well as her own daughter in law Mattson s alleged crimes included making threats against neighbors causing cows to give little milk 132 bewitching and killing livestock and appearing to witnesses in spectral form On February 27 1683 charges against Mattson and a neighbor Gertro a k a Yeshro Jacobsson wife of Hendrick Jacobsson were brought by the Attorney General before a grand jury of 21 men overseen by the colony s proprietor William Penn The grand jury returned a true bill indictment that afternoon and the cases proceeded to trial 130 A petit jury of twelve men was selected by Penn and an interpreter was appointed for the Finnish women who did not speak English 133 Penn barred the use of prosecution and defense lawyers conducted the questioning himself and permitted the introduction of unsubstantiated hearsay 132 Penn himself gave the closing charge and directions to the jury but what he told them was not transcribed According to the minutes of the Provincial Council dated February 27 1683 the jury returned with a verdict of Guilty of having the Comon Fame of a Witch but not Guilty in manner and Forme as Shee stands Endicted 132 134 Thus Mattson was found guilty of having the reputation of a witch but not guilty of bewitching animals Neither woman was convicted of witchcraft Hence the superstitious got enough to have their thinking affirmed Those less superstitious and justice minded got what they wanted 135 The accused were released on their husbands posting recognizance bonds of 50 pounds and promising six months good behavior 136 130 A popular legend tells of William Penn dismissing the charges against Mattson by affirming her legal right to fly on a broomstick over Philadelphia saying Well I know of no law against it 132 The record fails to show any such commentary but the story probably reflects popular views of Penn s socially progressive Quaker values 137 Tennessee Edit Accusations of witchcraft and wizardry led to the prosecution of a man in Tennessee as recently as 1833 138 139 140 Native Americans in the United States Edit Native American communities such as the Cherokee Chickasaw Creek Delaware Hopi Miami Natchez Navajo and Seneca have historically defined witches as evil doers who harm their own communities Witches are traditionally seen as criminals and witchcraft as a crime punishable by death if nothing else as a last resort 141 142 143 While some communities have passed laws specifically outlawing vigilante killings traditional views of witches and witchcraft have largely remained the same into 20th century 141 and through to the present among traditionals 143 Witches in these communities are defined in contrast to medicine people who are the healers and ceremonial leaders and who provide protection against witches and witchcraft 141 142 Cherokee Edit The Cherokee have traditional monster stories of witches such as Raven Mocker Ka lanu Ahkyeli ski and Spearfinger U tlun ta both known as dangerous killers 144 145 Among the Cherokee the medicine people are seen as a priesthood caste 146 known to work together in groups to help the community As in other Native communities they are defined as the opposite of witches who are seen as criminals 141 In contrast the traditional Cherokee witch lives alone eats alone fearful of being poisoned and commits heinous acts alone surreptitiously under the cover of darkness Jealous and hypersensitive by nature the Cherokee witch lives in the ever fearful grip of being publicly exposed 141 Cherokee healers have doctored dogs so the dogs can help them detect witches 141 As in the other tribes that have agreed to talk to anthropologists witchcraft has been traditionally punished by death in Cherokee communities In 1824 the western Cherokee passed new laws forbidding the wanton killing of suspected witches 147 however this attitude and retribution appears to have continued at the same rate in both the Cherokee and Creek communities throughout the 19th Century 147 In the twentieth century many communities responded to allegations of witchcraft with mental health treatment including medication But despite changes in laws and perspectives Kilpatrick quoting Shimony 1989 wrote in 1998 that one does still occasionally read about the demise of a suspected witch in Native American communities but that most of these deaths take place only while the witch is in animal guise by shooting or by means of counter witchcraft 141 Hopi Edit The Hopi have many beliefs and concerns about witches and witchcraft To the Hopis witches or evil hearted persons deliberately try to destroy social harmony by sowing discontent doubt and criticism through evil gossip as well as by actively combating medicine men 143 Suspicious deaths are often blamed on witchcraft with members of the community trying to figure out who might be a witch and who might have caused the death or other misfortune 143 They are called popwaqt the plural of powaqa witch or sorcerer They are unequivocally evil casting spells causing illness killing babies and destroying the life cycle They practice powaqqatsi the life of evil sorcery The Hopis call them kwitavi shit people a witch is a person who kills close family relatives in order to prolong his or her own life by four years By killing I mean causing through occult means an unnatural death such as stillbirth infants dying of ordinary illnesses or healthy adults suffering from strange illnesses Witches are also the occult cause of unusual circumstances such as hailstorms on a sunny day extreme drought or people suffering bad fortune 143 Navajo Edit There are several varieties of those considered to be witches by the Navajo The most common variety seen in horror fiction by non Navajo people is the yee naaldlooshii a type of anti įhnii 148 known in English as the skin walker They are believed to take the forms of animals in order to travel in secret and do harm to the innocent 148 In the Navajo language yee naaldlooshii translates to with it he goes on all fours 148 Corpse powder or corpse poison Navajo ant į literally witchery or harming is a substance made from powdered corpses The powder is used by witches to curse their victims 5 Traditional Navajos usually hesitate to discuss things like witches and witchcraft with non Navajos 149 As with other traditional cultures the term witch is never used for healers or others who help the community with their ceremonies and spiritual work 142 Latin America Edit Main article Witchcraft in Latin America When Franciscan friars from New Spain arrived in the Americas in 1524 they introduced Diabolism belief in the Christian Devil to the Indigenous peoples of the Americas 150 Bartolome de las Casas believed that human sacrifice was not diabolic in fact far off from it and was a natural result of religious expression 150 Mexican Indians gladly took in the belief of Diabolism and still managed to keep their belief in creator destroyer deities 151 Witchcraft was an important part of the social and cultural history of late Colonial Mexico during the Mexican Inquisition Spanish Inquisitors viewed witchcraft as a problem that could be cured simply through confession Yet as anthropologist Ruth Behar writes witchcraft not only in Mexico but in Latin America in general was a conjecture of sexuality witchcraft and religion in which Spanish indigenous and African cultures converged 152 Furthermore witchcraft in Mexico generally required an interethnic and interclass network of witches 153 Yet according to anthropology professor Laura Lewis witchcraft in colonial Mexico ultimately represented an affirmation of hegemony for women Indians and especially Indian women over their white male counterparts as a result of the casta system 154 The presence of the witch is a constant in the ethnographic history of colonial Brazil especially during the several denunciations and confessions given to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith of Bahia 1591 1593 Pernambuco and Paraiba 1593 1595 155 Brujeria often called a Latin American form of witchcraft is a syncretic Afro Caribbean tradition that combines Indigenous religious and magical practices from Aruba Bonaire and Curacao in the Dutch Caribbean Catholicism and European witchcraft 156 The tradition and terminology is considered to encompass both helpful and harmful practices 157 A male practitioner is called a brujo a female practitioner a bruja 157 Healers may be further distinguished by the terms kurioso or kurado a man or woman who performs trabou chiki little works and trabou grandi large treatments to promote or restore health bring fortune or misfortune deal with unrequited love and more serious concerns Sorcery usually involves reference to an entity referred to as the almasola or homber chiki 158 Asia Edit Main article Asian witchcraft This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Witchcraft news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Okabe The cat witch by Utagawa KuniyoshiAsian witchcraft encompasses various types of witchcraft practices across Asia In ancient times magic played a significant role in societies such as ancient Egypt and Babylonia as evidenced by historical records In the Middle East references to magic can be found in the Torah where witchcraft is condemned due to its association with belief in magic In the New Testament both Galatians and Revelation condemn sorcery though there is debate over the exact meaning of the Greek term pharmakeia Islamic beliefs incorporate divination and magic including black magic with the Quran offering protection against malevolent forces Miracles in Islam are attributed to angels and pious individuals distinct from witchcraft Judaism views witchcraft as tied to idolatry and necromancy and although some rabbis practiced magic it was often seen as divine intervention rather than witchcraft In Nepal accusations of witchcraft result in severe mistreatment of women leading to societal marginalization and even death India has seen incidents of witchcraft related violence and murder often targeting women accused of being witches In Chinese culture the practice of Gong Tau involves black magic for purposes such as revenge and financial assistance Japanese folklore features witch figures who employ foxes as familiars Korean history includes instances of individuals being condemned for using spells The Philippines has its own tradition of witches distinct from Western portrayals with their practices often countered by indigenous shamans Overall witchcraft beliefs and practices in Asia vary widely across cultures reflecting historical religious and social contexts Europe Edit Main article European witchcraft Witchcraft in Europe between 500 and 1750 was believed to be a combination of sorcery and heresy While sorcery attempts to produce negative supernatural effects through formulas and rituals heresy is the Christian contribution to witchcraft in which an individual makes a pact with the Devil In addition heresy denies witches the recognition of important Christian values such as baptism salvation Christ and sacraments 159 The beginning of the witch accusations in Europe took place in the 14th and 15th centuries but as the social disruptions of the 16th century took place witchcraft trials intensified 160 nbsp A 1555 German print showing the burning of witches Current scholarly estimates of the number of people executed for witchcraft in Europe vary between 40 000 and 100 000 161 The number of witch trials in Europe known to have ended in executions is around 12 000 162 In Early Modern European tradition witches were stereotypically though not exclusively women 86 163 European pagan belief in witchcraft was associated with the goddess Diana and dismissed as diabolical fantasies by medieval Christian authors 164 Throughout Europe there were an estimated 110 000 witchcraft trials between 1450 and 1750 with 1560 to 1660 being the peak of persecutions with half of the cases seeing the accused being executed 165 Witch hunts first appeared in large numbers in southern France and Switzerland during the 14th and 15th centuries The peak years of witch hunts in southwest Germany were from 1561 to 1670 166 It was commonly believed that individuals with power and prestige were involved in acts of witchcraft and even cannibalism 167 Because Europe had a lot of power over individuals living in West Africa Europeans in positions of power were often accused of taking part in these practices Though it is not likely that these individuals were actually involved in these practices they were most likely associated due to Europe s involvement in things like the slave trade which negatively affected the lives of many individuals in the Atlantic World throughout the fifteenth through seventeenth centuries 167 Early converts to Christianity looked to Christian clergy to work magic more effectively than the old methods under Roman paganism and Christianity provided a methodology involving saints and relics similar to the gods and amulets of the Pagan world As Christianity became the dominant religion in Europe its concern with magic lessened 168 The Protestant Christian explanation for witchcraft such as those typified in the confessions of the Pendle witches commonly involves a diabolical pact or at least an appeal to the intervention of the spirits of evil The witches or wizards engaged in such practices were alleged to reject Jesus and the sacraments observe the witches sabbath performing infernal rites that often parodied the Mass or other sacraments of the Church pay Divine honour to the Prince of Darkness and in return receive from him preternatural powers It was a folkloric belief that a Devil s Mark like the brand on cattle was placed upon a witch s skin by the devil to signify that this pact had been made 169 Oceania Edit Cook Islands Edit In pre Christian times witchcraft was a common practice in the Cook Islands The native name for a sorcerer was tangata purepure a man who prays 170 The prayers offered by the ta unga priests 171 to the gods worshiped on national or tribal marae temples were termed karakia 172 those on minor occasions to the lesser gods were named pure All these prayers were metrical and were handed down from generation to generation with the utmost care There were prayers for every such phase in life for success in battle for a change in wind to overwhelm an adversary at sea or that an intended voyage be propitious that his crops may grow to curse a thief or wish ill luck and death to his foes Few men of middle age were without a number of these prayers or charms The succession of a sorcerer was from father to son or from uncle to nephew So too of sorceresses it would be from mother to daughter or from aunt to niece Sorcerers and sorceresses were often slain by relatives of their supposed victims 173 A singular enchantment was employed to kill off a husband of a pretty woman desired by someone else The expanded flower of a Gardenia was stuck upright a very difficult performance in a cup i e half a large coconut shell of water A prayer was then offered for the husband s speedy death the sorcerer earnestly watching the flower Should it fall the incantation was successful But if the flower still remained upright he will live The sorcerer would in that case try his skill another day with perhaps better success 174 According to Beatrice Grimshaw a journalist who visited the Cook Islands in 1907 the uncrowned Queen Makea was believed to have possessed the mystic power called mana giving the possessor the power to slay at will It also included other gifts such as second sight to a certain extent as well as the power to bring good or evil luck 175 Papua New Guinea Edit A local newspaper informed that more than fifty people were killed in two Highlands provinces of Papua New Guinea in 2008 for allegedly practicing witchcraft 176 An estimated 50 150 alleged witches are killed each year in Papua New Guinea 177 Demographics and surveys EditFurther information By region A 2022 study found that belief in witchcraft as in the use of malevolent magic or powers is still widespread in some parts of the world It found that belief in witchcraft varied from 9 of people in some countries to 90 in others and was linked to cultural and socioeconomic factors Stronger belief in witchcraft correlated with poorer economic development weak institutions lower levels of education lower life expectancy lower life satisfaction and high religiosity 178 179 It contrasted two hypotheses about future changes in witchcraft belief 179 witchcraft beliefs should decline in the process of development due to improved security and health lower exposure to shocks spread of education and scientific approach to explaining life events according to standard modernization theory some aspects of development namely rising inequality globalization technological change and migration may instead revive witchcraft beliefs by disrupting established social order according to literature largely inspired by observations from Sub Saharan Africa nbsp Prevalence of belief in witchcraft by country 179 nbsp Socio demographic correlates of witchcraft beliefs 179 In the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Russian state media claimed that Ukraine was using black magic against the Russian military specifically accusing Oleksiy Arestovych of enlisting sorcerers and witches as well as Ukrainian soldiers of consecrating weapons with blood magick 180 181 Neopagan Witchcraft EditMain articles Neopagan witchcraft and Wicca During the 20th century interest in witchcraft rose in English speaking and European countries From the 1920s Margaret Murray popularized the witch cult hypothesis the idea that those persecuted as witches in early modern Europe were followers of a benevolent pagan religion that had survived the Christianization of Europe This has been discredited by further historical research 182 183 From the 1930s occult neopagan groups began to emerge who called their religion a kind of witchcraft They were initiatory secret societies inspired by Murray s witch cult theory ceremonial magic Aleister Crowley s Thelema and historical paganism 184 185 186 The biggest religious movement to emerge from this is Wicca They do not use the term witchcraft in the traditional way but instead define their practices as a kind of positive magic Today some Wiccans and members of related traditions self identify as witches and use the term witchcraft for their magico religious beliefs and practices primarily in Western anglophone countries 17 Various forms of Wicca are now practised as a religion with positive ethical principles organized into autonomous covens and led by a High Priesthood A survey published in 2000 cited just over 200 000 people who reported practicing Wicca in the United States 187 There is also an Eclectic Wiccan movement of individuals and groups who share key Wiccan beliefs but have no formal link with traditional Wiccan covens Some Wiccan inspired neopagans call their beliefs and practices traditional witchcraft or the traditional craft rather than Wicca 188 Witches in art and literature EditFurther information Witch archetype In art and literature and List of fictional witches nbsp Albrecht Durer c 1500 Witch riding backwards on a goatWitches have a long history of being depicted in art although most of their earliest artistic depictions seem to originate in Early Modern Europe particularly the Medieval and Renaissance periods Many scholars attribute their manifestation in art as inspired by texts such as Canon Episcopi a demonology centered work of literature and Malleus Maleficarum a witch craze manual published in 1487 by Heinrich Kramer and Jacob Sprenger 189 Witches in fiction span a wide array of characterizations They are typically but not always female and generally depicted as either villains or heroines 190 See also EditAradia or the Gospel of the Witches 1899 book Feminist interpretations of witch trials in the early modern period Flying ointment History of goetia Kitchen witch Witches SabbathReferences Edit Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press p ix What is a witch The standard scholarly definition of one was summed up in 1978 by a leading expert in the anthropology of religion Rodney Needham as someone who causes harm to others by mystical means In stating this he was self consciously not providing a personal view of the matter but summing up an established scholarly consensus When the only historian of the European trials to set them systematically in a global context in recent years Wolfgang Behringer undertook his task he termed witchcraft a generic term for all kinds of evil magic and sorcery as perceived by contemporaries Again in doing so he was self consciously perpetuating a scholarly norm That usage has persisted till the present among anthropologists and historians The definition discussed above seems still to be the most widespread and frequent The use of witch to mean a worker of harmful magic has not only been used more commonly and generally but seems to have been employed by those with a genuine belief in magic Thomas Keith 1997 Religion and the Decline of Magic Oxford England Oxford University Press p 519 ISBN 978 0297002208 At this day wrote Reginald Scot in 1584 it is indifferent to say in the English tongue she is a witch or she is a wise woman Nevertheless it is possible to isolate that kind of witchcraft which involved the employment or presumed employment of some occult means of doing harm to other people in a way which was generally disapproved of In this sense the belief in witchcraft can be defined as the attribution of misfortune to occult human agency A witch was a person of either sex but more often female who could mysteriously injure other people Gershman Boris 23 November 2022 Witchcraft beliefs around the world An exploratory analysis PLOS ONE 17 11 e0276872 Bibcode 2022PLoSO 1776872G doi 10 1371 journal pone 0276872 PMC 9683553 PMID 36417350 Beliefs in witchcraft defined as an ability of certain people to intentionally cause harm via supernatural means have been documented all over the world both recently and in the distant past This paper presents a new global dataset on contemporary witchcraft beliefs that covers countries and territories representing roughly one half of the world s adult population The data reveal that far from being a remnant of the past limited to small isolated communities witchcraft beliefs are highly widespread throughout the modern world At the same time there are significant differences in their prevalence within and across nations Witchcraft Oxford Bibliographies Online Witchcraft refers to a belief in the perpetration of harm by persons through mystical means Ethnographic studies across the globe have shown that far from being confined to the distant past of Europe and New England the belief in witchcraft is widely distributed in time and place in Africa Melanesia the Pacific Asia and the Americas The most commonly accepted definition was provided in Evans Pritchard 1937 Evans Pritchard defines the former as the innate inherited ability to cause misfortune or death Stein Rebecca Stein Philip 2017 The Anthropology of Religion Magic and Witchcraft Taylor amp Francis pp 233 234 244 248 When anthropologists speak of witchcraft they generally refer to individuals who have an innate ability to do evil The idea of witchcraft as an evil force bringing misfortune to members of a community is found in a great number of societies throughout the world In these societies witchcraft is evil there are no good witches As is common in many societies throughout the world those accused of witchcraft were primarily people living on the fringes of society Many were marginalized and powerless women without husbands brothers or sons to protect their interests Others were those who dealt with folk remedies and midwifery When such remedies went bad and when face to face dispute resolution failed the customers who paid for the cures or the potions might conclude that the purveyor was at fault In some popular media witches are portrayed in a very positive light which fits only the Wiccan definition Singh Manvir 2 February 2021 Magic Explanations and Evil The Origins and Design of Witches and Sorcerers Current Anthropology 62 1 2 29 doi 10 1086 713111 ISSN 0011 3204 S2CID 232214522 Archived from the original on 18 July 2021 Retrieved 28 April 2021 Russell Jeffrey Burton Lewis Ioan M 21 June 2023 Witchcraft Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 28 June 2023 Retrieved 28 July 2023 Although defined differently in disparate historical and cultural contexts witchcraft has often been seen especially in the West as the work of crones who meet secretly at night indulge in cannibalism and orgiastic rites with the Devil or Satan and perform black magic Witchcraft thus defined exists more in the imagination of contemporaries than in any objective reality Yet this stereotype has a long history and has constituted for many cultures a viable explanation of evil in the world a b Singh Manvir 2 February 2021 Magic Explanations and Evil The Origins and Design of Witches and Sorcerers Current Anthropology 62 1 2 29 doi 10 1086 713111 ISSN 0011 3204 S2CID 232214522 Archived from the original on 18 July 2021 Retrieved 28 April 2021 a b Thomas Keith 1997 Religion and the Decline of Magic Oxford Oxford University Press pp 464 465 ISBN 978 0297002208 Ankarloo Bengt and Henningsen Gustav 1990 Early Modern European Witchcraft Centres and Peripheries Oxford Oxford University Press pp 1 14 a b Perrone Bobette Stockel H Henrietta Krueger Victoria 1993 Medicine women curanderas and women doctors University of Oklahoma Press p 189 ISBN 978 0806125121 Archived from the original on 23 April 2017 Retrieved 8 October 2010 La Fontaine J 2016 Witches and Demons A Comparative Perspective on Witchcraft and Satanism Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1785330865 Davies Owen 2003 Cunning Folk Popular Magic in English History London Hambledon Continuum pp 7 13 ISBN 978 1 85285 297 9 a b Thomas Keith 1997 Religion and the Decline of Magic Oxford England Oxford University Press p 519 ISBN 978 0297002208 At this day wrote Reginald Scot in 1584 it is indifferent to say in the English tongue she is a witch or she is a wise woman Nevertheless it is possible to isolate that kind of witchcraft which involved the employment or presumed employment of some occult means of doing harm to other people in a way which was generally disapproved of In this sense the belief in witchcraft can be defined as the attribution of misfortune to occult human agency A witch was a person of either sex but more often female who could mysteriously injure other people Riddle John M 1997 Eve s Herbs A History of Contraception and Abortion in the West Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press pp 110 119 ISBN 0674270266 Ehrenreich Barbara English Deirdre 2010 Witches Midwives amp Nurses A History of Women Healers Second ed New York Feminist Press at CUNY pp 31 59 ISBN 978 1558616905 Demetrio F R 1988 Philippine Studies Vol 36 No 3 Shamans Witches and Philippine Society pp 372 380 Ateneo de Manila University Tan Michael L 2008 Revisiting Usog Pasma Kulam University of the Philippines Press ISBN 978 9715425704 Archived from the original on 26 January 2021 Retrieved 17 September 2020 Silverblatt I 1983 The evolution of witchcraft and the meaning of healing in colonial Andean society Culture Medicine and Psychiatry 7 4 413 427 doi 10 1007 BF00052240 PMID 6362989 S2CID 23596915 Wallace Dale Lancaster January 2015 Rethinking religion magic and witchcraft in South Africa From colonial coherence to postcolonial conundrum Journal for the Study of Religion 28 1 23 51 Retrieved 15 September 2023 via Acaemdia edu Bachmann Judith 2021 African Witchcraft and Religion among the Yoruba Translation as Demarcation Practice within a Global Religious History Method amp Theory in the Study of Religion 33 3 4 381 409 doi 10 1163 15700682 12341522 S2CID 240055921 Lawrence Salmah Eva Lina 2015 Witchcraft Sorcery Violence Matrilineal and Decolonial Reflections In Forsyth Miranda Eves Richard eds Talking it Through Responses to Sorcery and Witchcraft Beliefs and Practices in Melanesia Canberra Australia ANU Press a b Doyle White Ethan 2016 Wicca History Belief and Community in Modern Pagan Witchcraft Liverpool University Press pp 1 9 73 ISBN 978 1 84519 754 4 Berger Helen A Ezzy Douglas September 2009 Mass Media and Religious Identity A Case Study of Young Witches Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 48 3 501 514 doi 10 1111 j 1468 5906 2009 01462 x JSTOR 40405642 Kelly Aidan A 1992 An Update on Neopagan Witchcraft in America In James R Lewis J Gordon Melton eds Perspectives on the New Age Albany State University of New York Press pp 136 151 ISBN 978 0791412138 Lewis James 1996 Magical Religion and Modern Witchcraft SUNY Press p 376 Ankarloo Bengt Clark Stuart 2001 Witchcraft and Magic in Europe Biblical and Pagan Societies Philadelphia Pennsylvania University of Philadelphia Press p xiii ISBN 978 0826486066 Magic is central not only in primitive societies but in high cultural societies as well Ankarloo amp Clark 2001 a b c d Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press p 10 a b Pocs 1999 pp 9 10 The first three categories were proposed by Richard Kieckhefer the fourth added by Christina Larner Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press pp 245 248 Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press pp 3 4 Russell Jeffrey Burton Witchcraft Britannica com Archived from the original on 10 May 2013 Retrieved 29 June 2013 Pocs 1999 pp 9 12 Pearlman Jonathan 11 April 2013 Papua New Guinea urged to halt witchcraft violence after latest sorcery case The Telegraph London England Telegraph Media Group Archived from the original on 11 February 2018 Retrieved 5 April 2018 Kielburger Craig Kielburger Marc 18 February 2008 HIV in Africa Distinguishing disease from witchcraft Toronto Star Toronto Ontario Canada Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd Archived from the original on 19 October 2017 Retrieved 18 September 2017 Ebola outbreak Witchcraft hampering treatment says doctor BBC News London BBC 2 August 2014 Archived from the original on 18 July 2021 Retrieved 22 June 2018 citing a doctor from Medecins Sans Frontieres A widespread belief in witchcraft is hampering efforts to halt the Ebola virus from spreading Social stigma as an epidemiological determinant for leprosy elimination in Cameroon Journal of Public Health in Africa Archived from the original on 31 July 2017 Retrieved 27 August 2014 Akosua Adu 3 September 2014 Ebola Human Rights Group Warns Disease Is Not Caused By Witchcraft The Ghana Italy News Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 Retrieved 31 October 2017 Adler Margot 1979 Drawing Down the Moon Witches Druids Goddess Worshippers and Other Pagans in America Today New York City Viking Press pp 45 47 84 85 105 OCLC 515560 Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press p 121 Harper Douglas witchcraft n Online Etymology Dictionary Archived from the original on 5 November 2013 Retrieved 29 October 2013 Home Oxford English Dictionary oed com Archived from the original on 18 July 2021 Retrieved 18 July 2021 witch Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required hag n Online Etymology Dictionary Definition of WITCH www merriam webster com Retrieved 5 June 2021 Hutton Ronald 2006 Witches Druids and King Arthur London A amp C Black p 203 ISBN 978 1852855550 Archived from the original on 18 July 2021 Retrieved 22 November 2020 a b c d e f g h i Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press pp 19 22 Evans Pritchard Edward Evan 1937 Witchcraft Oracles and Magic Among the Azande Oxford Oxford University Press pp 8 9 ISBN 978 0198740292 Levack Brian 2013 The Oxford Handbook of Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe and Colonial America Oxford University Press p 54 Luck Georg 1985 Arcana Mundi Magic and the Occult in the Greek and Roman Worlds a Collection of Ancient Texts Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press pp 254 260 394 ISBN 978 0801825231 Kittredge George Lyman 1929 Witchcraft in Old and New England New York City Russell amp Russell p 172 ISBN 978 0674182325 Davies Owen 1999 Witchcraft Magic and Culture 1736 1951 Manchester England Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0719056567 Burns William 2003 Witch Hunts in Europe and America An Encyclopedia Bloomsbury Publishing pp 141 142 Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press p 264 Levack Brian 2013 The Oxford Handbook of Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe and Colonial America Oxford University Press p 54 55 Semple Sarah December 2003 Illustrations of damnation in late Anglo Saxon manuscripts PDF Anglo Saxon England 32 231 245 doi 10 1017 S0263675103000115 S2CID 161982897 Archived PDF from the original on 31 July 2020 Retrieved 26 October 2018 Semple Sarah June 1998 A fear of the past The place of the prehistoric burial mound in the ideology of middle and later Anglo Saxon England World Archaeology 30 1 109 126 doi 10 1080 00438243 1998 9980400 JSTOR 125012 Pope J C 1968 Homilies of Aelfric a supplementary collection Early English Text Society 260 Vol II Oxford England Oxford University Press p 796 Meaney Audrey L December 1984 AEfric and Idolatry Journal of Religious History 13 2 119 135 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9809 1984 tb00191 x There is some discrepancy between translations compare the Catholic Encyclopedia article on Witchcraft Archived 2021 02 11 at the Wayback Machine accessed 31 March 2006 and the L W King translation Archived 2007 09 16 at the Wayback Machine accessed 31 March 2006 Sanhedrin 67b Catholic Encyclopedia Witchcraft Newadvent org 1 October 1912 Archived from the original on 11 February 2021 Retrieved 31 October 2013 Green Kayla The Golem in the Attic Archived 25 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine Moment 1 February 2011 25 August 2017 Bilefsky Dan 10 May 2009 Hard Times Give New Life to Prague s Golem The New York Times Archived from the original on 9 May 2013 Retrieved 19 March 2013 According to Czech legend the Golem was fashioned from clay and brought to life by a rabbi to protect Prague s 16th century ghetto from persecution and is said to be called forth in times of crisis True to form he is once again experiencing a revival and in this commercial age has spawned a one monster industry Savage Smith Emilie 2004 Magic and Divination in Early Islam Ashgate Variorum ISBN 978 0860787150 Archived from the original on 18 July 2021 Retrieved 25 August 2020 Khaldun Ibn 2015 The Muqaddimah An Introduction to History Abridged ed Princeton University Press p 578 ISBN 978 0691166285 Archived from the original on 18 July 2021 Retrieved 4 May 2021 Savage Smith Emilie ed Magic and divination in early Islam Routledge 2021 p 87 a b c d Dickie Matthew 2003 Magic and Magicians in the Greco Roman World Routledge pp 138 142 a b c d e Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press pp 59 66 a b c d e f g Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press pp 24 25 Davies Owen 2007 Popular Magic Cunning folk in English History A amp C Black p xiii a b c d Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press pp x xi Macfarlane Alan 1999 Witchcraft in Tudor and Stuart England A Regional and Comparative Study Psychology Press p 130 ISBN 978 0415196123 a b Willis Deborah 2018 Malevolent Nurture Witch Hunting and Maternal Power in Early Modern England Cornell University Press pp 27 28 Ole Peter Grell and Robert W Scribner 2002 Tolerance and Intolerance in the European Reformation Cambridge University Press p 45 Not all the stereotypes created by elites were capable of popular reception The most interesting example concerns cunning folk whom secular and religious authorities consistently sought to associate with negative stereotypes of superstition or witchcraft This proved no deterrent to their activities or to the positive evaluation in the popular mind of what they had to offer Scot Reginald 1584 Chapter 9 The Discoverie of Witchcraft Vol Booke V Wilby Emma 2006 Cunning Folk and Familiar Spirits pp 51 54 Wilby 2006 p 123 Davies Owen 2007 Popular Magic Cunning folk in English History A amp C Black p 164 Davies Owen 2007 Popular Magic Cunning folk in English History A amp C Black p 167 Pocs 1999 p 12 Stokker Kathleen 2007 Remedies and Rituals Folk Medicine in Norway and the New Land St Paul MN Minnesota Historical Society Press pp 81 82 ISBN 978 0873517508 Supernatural healing of the sort practiced by Inger Roed and Lisbet Nypan known as signeri played a role in the vast majority of Norway s 263 documented witch trials In trial after trial accused witches came forward and freely testified about their healing methods telling about the salves they made and the bonner prayers they read over them to enhance their potency Hoggard Brian 2004 The archaeology of counter witchcraft and popular magic in Beyond the Witch Trials Witchcraft and Magic in Enlightenment Europe Manchester University Press p 167 ISBN missing Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press p 15 Levack Brian 2013 The Oxford Handbook of Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe and Colonial America Oxford University Press pp 7 8 Willis Deborah 2018 Malevolent Nurture Witch Hunting and Maternal Power in Early Modern England Cornell University Press pp 35 36 Davies Owen 2007 Popular Magic Cunning folk in English History A amp C Black p 164 Willis Deborah 2018 Malevolent Nurture Witch Hunting and Maternal Power in Early Modern England Cornell University Press p 23 a b c Cai 2014 Cai 2014 p 1 a b Gibbons Jenny 1998 Recent Developments in the Study of the Great European Witch Hunt in The Pomegranate Archived 2009 01 26 at the Wayback Machine 5 Lammas 1998 Barstow Anne Llewellyn 1994 Witchcraze A New History of the European Witch Hunts San Francisco Pandora p 23 ISBN 978 0062500496 McNeill F Marian 1957 The Silver Bough A Four Volume Study of the National and Local Festivals of Scotland Vol 1 Edinburgh Canongate Books ISBN 978 0862412319 Chambers Robert 1861 Domestic Annals of Scotland Edinburgh Scotland ISBN 978 1298711960 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Sinclair George 1871 Satan s Invisible World Discovered Edinburgh a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Campbell Heather M ed 2011 The Emergence of Modern Europe c 1500 to 1788 Britannica Educational Publishing p 27 ISBN 978 1615303434 Archived from the original on 26 January 2021 Retrieved 29 June 2013 Jolly Karen Raudvere Catharina Peters Edward 2002 Witchcraft and Magic in Europe The Middle Ages New York City A amp C Black p 241 ISBN 978 0485890037 In 1538 the Spanish Inquisition cautioned its members not to believe everything the Malleus said even when it presented apparently firm evidence History of Witches History com 20 October 2020 Retrieved 26 October 2021 Almond Philip C 2009 King James I and the burning of Reginald Scot s The Discoverie of Witchcraft The invention of a tradition Notes and Queries 56 2 209 213 doi 10 1093 notesj gjp002 Reilly Pamela October 1956 Some Notes on Friedrich von Spee s Cautio Criminalis The Modern Language Review 51 4 536 542 doi 10 2307 3719223 JSTOR 3719223 Bath Jo Newton John eds 2008 Witchcraft and the Act of 1604 Leiden Brill pp 243 244 ISBN 978 9004165281 A Global Issue that Demands Action PDF the Academic Council on the United Nations System ACUNS Vienna Liaison Office 2013 Archived PDF from the original on 30 June 2014 Retrieved 7 June 2014 Diwan Mohammed 1 July 2004 Conflict between State Legal Norms and Norms Underlying Popular Beliefs Witchcraft in Africa as a Case Study Duke Journal of Comparative amp International Law 14 2 351 388 Archived from the original on 25 February 2021 Retrieved 28 March 2021 Witch Hunts in Modern South Africa An Under represented Facet of Gender based Violence PDF MRC UNISA Crime Violence and Injury Lead Programm 2009 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 694 6630 Archived from the original PDF on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 7 June 2014 Nepal Witchcraft as a Superstition and a form of violence against women in Nepal Humanrights asia Asian Human Rights Commission Archived from the original on 25 June 2014 Retrieved 7 June 2014 Adinkrah Mensah April 2004 Witchcraft Accusations and Female Homicide Victimization in Contemporary Ghana Violence Against Women 10 4 325 356 doi 10 1177 1077801204263419 S2CID 146650565 World Report on Violence and Health PDF World Health Organization Archived PDF from the original on 24 January 2014 Retrieved 7 June 2014 Saudi woman beheaded for witchcraft and sorcery Edition cnn com 13 December 2011 Archived from the original on 21 May 2020 Retrieved 7 June 2014 Saudi man executed for witchcraft and sorcery BBC News Bbc com 19 June 2012 Archived from the original on 30 May 2019 Retrieved 7 June 2014 di Giovanni Janine 14 October 2014 When It Comes to Beheadings ISIS Has Nothing Over Saudi Arabia Newsweek Archived from the original on 16 October 2014 Retrieved 17 October 2014 Bussien Nathaly et al 2011 Breaking the spell Responding to witchcraft accusations against children in New Issues in refugee Research 197 Geneva Switzerland UNHCR Cimpric Aleksandra 2010 Children accused of witchcraft An anthropological study of contemporary practices in Africa Dakar Senegal UNICEF WCARO Molina Javier Aguilar 2006 The Invention of Child Witches in the Democratic Republic of Congo Social cleansing religious commerce and the difficulties of being a parent in an urban culture London Save the Children Human Rights Watch 2006 Children in the DRC Human Rights Watch report 18 2 Witchcraft murder Couple jailed for Kristy Bamu killing BBC News Bbc co uk 5 March 2012 Archived from the original on 8 April 2014 Retrieved 8 June 2014 Dangerfield Andy 1 March 2012 Government urged to tackle witchcraft belief child abuse BBC News Bbc co uk Archived from the original on 8 October 2014 Retrieved 8 June 2014 Okeja Uchenna 2011 An African Context of the Belief in Witchcraft and Magic in Rational Magic Fisher Imprints ISBN 978 1848880610 page needed Igwe Leo September October 2020 Accused Witches Burned Killed in Nigeria Skeptical Inquirer Amherst New York Center for Inquiry Geschiere Peter 1997 The Modernity of Witchcraft Politics and the Occult in Postcolonial Africa Translated by Peter Geschiere and Janet Roitman University of Virginia Press p 13 ISBN 0813917034 The dangers of witchcraft Archived from the original on 12 March 2010 Retrieved 26 March 2010 Kolwezi Accused of witchcraft by parents and churches children in the Democratic Republic of Congo are being rescued by Christian activists Christianity Today September 2009 Archived from the original on 14 November 2011 Retrieved 14 October 2011 Whitaker Kati September 2012 Ghana witch camps Widows lives in exile BBC News BBC Archived from the original on 20 October 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2012 Kanina Wangui 21 May 2008 Mob burns to death 11 Kenyan witches Reuters Archived from the original on 20 June 2017 Retrieved 15 September 2016 Byrne Carrie 2011 Hunting the vulnerable Witchcraft and the law in Malawi Consultancy Africa Intelligence 16 June Stepping Stones Nigeria 2007 Supporting Victims of Witchcraft Abuse and Street Children in Nigeria humantrafficking org Archived from the original on 17 October 2012 West Harry G Ethnographic Sorcery p 24 2007 The University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226893983 pbk Cumes David 2004 Africa in my bones Claremont New Africa Books p 14 ISBN 978 0 86486 556 4 Springfield s 375th From Puritans to presidents Masslive com 10 May 2011 Archived from the original on 2 November 2013 Retrieved 31 October 2013 Fraden Judith Bloom Dennis Brindell Fraden The Salem Witch Trials Marshall Cavendish 2008 p 15 ISBN missing George Brown Tindall David Emory Shi 2013 Jon Durbin Retrieved 10 3 2013 ed America A Narrative History Brief Ninth Edition Volume One ed W W Norton amp Company Inc p 85 ISBN 978 0393912654 Baker Emerson W 2016 The Salem Witch Trials Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199329175 013 324 ISBN 978 0199329175 Salem Witch Museum www salemwitchmuseum com Archived from the original on 28 March 2018 Retrieved 23 March 2018 David W Thompson Sister Witch The Life of Moll Dyer 2017 Solstice Publishing ISBN 978 1973105756 page needed Some of The Famous Witch Trials In Pennsylvania The Realness of Witchcraft In America Northvegr Foundation 1 Archived 2009 08 27 at the Wayback Machine a b c The Fame Of A Witch The Pennsylvania Lawyer Craig R Shagin Published by the Pennsylvania Bar Association September October 2016 2 Statutes of the Realm 1 Ja 1 c 12 London 1817 repr The Statutes 3rd ed London 1950 Witchcraft Statute of 1604 of James I Archived from the original on 17 May 2008 Retrieved 9 May 2009 a b c d Before Salem a witch inquiry in Pennsylvania The case offered William Penn a chance to show his tolerance Joseph S Kennedy Philadelphia Inquirer August 1 2004 Ashmeade Henry Graham 1884 History of Delaware County Pennsylvania Philadelphia L H Everts amp Co pp 229 230 Retrieved 19 June 2017 Minutes of the Provincial Council of Pennsylvania vol 1 J Severns Philadelphia PA Provincial Council 1852 pp 95 96 PA History Witch Margaret Mattson was Profiled and Arrested in the 1680s by Tom Roy Smith AKA The Ghost of William Penn Delaware County Daily Times October 15 2013 3 The Century Magazine by J M Buckley December 1891 Vol XLIII No 2 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2 May 2003 Retrieved 13 April 2003 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Weird Pennsylvania by Matt Lake New York Sterling Publishers 2005 ISBN missing page needed Old Stories Topix Archived from the original on 7 July 2012 Retrieved 21 September 2011 Hogue Albert Ross 1916 History of Fentress County Tennessee Archived from the original on 9 August 2016 Retrieved 15 February 2016 Sakowski Carolyn 2007 Touring the East Tennessee Backroads John F Blair Publisher p 212 ISBN 978 0895874764 Archived from the original on 9 August 2016 Retrieved 15 February 2016 a b c d e f g Kilpatrick Alan 1998 The Night Has a Naked Soul Witchcraft and Sorcery Among the Western Cherokee Syracuse University Press pp 4 6 A cursory survey of the ethnohistorical literature indicates that death was the standard punishment among Native American societies Numerous eighteenth and nineteenth century accounts of random witch killings are recorded among the Chickasaw Adair 1775 1930 Natchez Thwaites 1847 425 the Miami McCoy 1840 1970 97 and the Delaware Miller 1994 a b c Kluckhohn Clyde Leighton Dorothea 1974 The Navaho Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 6060 3 5 a b c d e Geertz Armin W Summer 2011 Hopi Indian Witchcraft and Healing On Good Evil and Gossip American Indian Quarterly 35 3 372 393 doi 10 1353 aiq 2011 a447052 ISSN 0095 182X OCLC 659388380 PMID 22069814 To the Hopis witches or evil hearted persons deliberately try to destroy social harmony by sowing discontent doubt and criticism through evil gossip as well as by actively combating medicine men Admitting he practiced witchcraft could cost him his life and occult power Mooney James 120 The Raven Mocker Myths of the Cherokee Nineteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology 1897 98 Part I 1900 Retrieved 16 August 2023 66 U tlun ta The Spear finger Internet Sacred Texts Archive Evinity Publishing INC Retrieved 15 February 2013 Kilpatrick Alan 1998 The Night Has a Naked Soul Witchcraft and Sorcery Among the Western Cherokee Syracuse University Press p 3 a b Kilpatrick Alan 1998 The Night Has a Naked Soul Witchcraft and Sorcery Among the Western Cherokee Syracuse University Press p 5 Now there is a law against it but even last year an old woman was killed as a witch Swanton 1928 a b c Wall Leon and William Morgan Navajo English Dictionary Hippocrene Books New York City 1998 ISBN 0781802474 page needed Keene Dr Adrienne Magic in North America Part 1 Ugh Archived 2016 04 06 at the Wayback Machine at Native Appropriations 8 March 2016 Accessed 9 April 2016 What happens when Rowling pulls this in is we as Native people are now opened up to a barrage of questions about these beliefs and traditions but these are not things that need or should be discussed by outsiders At all I m sorry if that seems unfair but that s how our cultures survive a b Diabolism in the New World ABCCLIO 2005 Archived from the original on 18 July 2021 Retrieved 10 February 2013 Young Eric Van Cervantes Fernando Mills Kenneth November 1996 The Devil in the New World The Impact of Diabolism in New Spain The Hispanic American Historical Review 76 4 789 doi 10 2307 2517981 JSTOR 2517981 Behar Ruth 1987 Sex and Sin Witchcraft and the Devil in Late Colonial Mexico American Ethnologist 14 1 34 54 doi 10 1525 ae 1987 14 1 02a00030 hdl 2027 42 136539 JSTOR 645632 Lavrin Asuncion Sexuality amp Marriage in Colonial Latin America Reprint ed Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1992 p 192 ISBN missing Lewis Laura A Hall of mirrors power witchcraft and caste in colonial Mexico Durham N C Duke University Press 2003 p 13 ISBN missing in Portuguese Joao Ribeiro Junior O Que e Magia pp 48 49 Ed Abril Cultural ISBN missing Maria Herrera Sobek 2012 Celebrating Latino Folklore An Encyclopedia of Cultural Traditions ABC CLIO p 174 ISBN 978 0313343391 a b Herrera Sobek 2012 p 175 Blom Jan Dirk Poulina Igmar T van Gellecum Trevor L Hoek Hans W December 2015 Traditional healing practices originating in Aruba Bonaire and Curacao A review of the literature on psychiatry and Brua Transcultural Psychiatry 52 6 840 860 doi 10 1177 1363461515589709 PMID 26062555 S2CID 27804741 Monter E William 1969 European Witchcraft New York pp vii viii a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Kiekhefer Richard 201 European Witch Trials Their Foundations in Popular and Learned Culture 1300 1500 Routledge p 102 ISBN missing Brian P Levack The Witch Hunt in Early Modern Europe multiplied the number of known European witch trials by the average rate of conviction and execution to arrive at a figure of around 60 000 deaths Anne Lewellyn Barstow Witchcraze adjusted Levack s estimate to account for lost records estimating 100 000 deaths Ronald Hutton Triumph of the Moon argues that Levack s estimate had already been adjusted for these and revises the figure to approximately 40 000 Estimates of executions Archived from the original on 6 October 2018 Retrieved 10 May 2009 Based on Ronald Hutton s essay Counting the Witch Hunt Drury Nevill 1992 Dictionary of Mysticism and the Esoteric Traditions Revised Edition Bridport Dorset Prism Press Witch Regino of Prum 906 see Ginzburg 1990 part 2 ch 1 89ff Timbers Frances 2019 Chapter 5 By Flower and Fruit Popular Culture A History of Magic and Witchcraft Sabbats Satan amp Superstitions in the West Pen and Sword ISBN 978 1526731821 H C Erik Midelfort Witch Hunting in Southwestern Germany 1562 1684 1972 p 71 ISBN missing a b Thornton John 2003 Cannibals Witches and Slave Traders in the Atlantic World The William and Mary Quarterly 60 2 273 294 doi 10 2307 3491764 JSTOR 3491764 Maxwell Stuart P G 2000 The Emergence of the Christian Witch in History Today Nov 2000 Drymon M M Disguised as the Devil How Lyme Disease Created Witches and Changed History 2008 ISBN missing page needed Jasper Buse 1995 Cook Islands Maori Dictionary Cook Islands Ministry of Education p 372 ISBN 978 0728602304 Archived from the original on 8 August 2016 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Jasper Buse 1995 Cook Islands Maori Dictionary Cook Islands Ministry of Education p 471 ISBN 978 0728602304 Archived from the original on 8 August 2016 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Jasper Buse 1995 Cook Islands Maori Dictionary Cook Islands Ministry of Education p 156 ISBN 978 0728602304 Archived from the original on 8 August 2016 Retrieved 27 February 2016 William Wyatt Gill 1892 Wizards The south Pacific and New Guinea past and present with notes on the Hervey group an illustrative song and various myths Sydney Charles Potter Government Printer p 21 William Wyatt Gill 1892 Wizards The south Pacific and New Guinea past and present with notes on the Hervey group an illustrative song and various myths Sydney Charles Potter Government Printer p 22 Beatrice Grimshaw 1908 A Mystic Power In the Strange South Seas London Hutchinson amp Co pp 71 72 Woman suspected of witchcraft burned alive Archived 2009 04 29 at the Wayback Machine CNN com January 8 2009 Papua New Guinea s Sorcery Refugees Women Accused of Witchcraft Flee Homes to Escape Violence Archived 2017 03 20 at the Wayback Machine Vice News January 6 2015 Witchcraft beliefs are widespread highly variable around the world Public Library of Science via phys org Retrieved 17 December 2022 a b c d Gershman Boris 23 November 2022 Witchcraft beliefs around the world An exploratory analysis PLOS ONE 17 11 e0276872 Bibcode 2022PLoSO 1776872G doi 10 1371 journal pone 0276872 PMC 9683553 PMID 36417350 Gault Matthew 5 May 2022 Russian State Media Claims to Discover Militarized Ukrainian Witches Vice Retrieved 21 July 2023 van Brugen Isabel 6 May 2022 Witches and Sorcerers Russian Media Peddles Ukraine Black Magic Claims Newsweek Retrieved 21 July 2023 Hutton Ronald 2017 The Witch A History of Fear from Ancient Times to the Present Yale University Press p 121 Rose Elliot A Razor for a Goat University of Toronto Press 1962 Hutton Ronald The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles Cambridge Mass Blackwell Publishers 1993 Hutton Ronald The Triumph of the Moon A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft Oxford University Press 1999 ISBN missing Hutton R The Triumph of the Moon A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft Oxford University Press pp 205 252 1999 ISBN missing Kelly A A Crafting the Art of Magic Book I a History of Modern Witchcraft 1939 1964 Minnesota Llewellyn Publications 1991 ISBN missing Valiente D The Rebirth of Witchcraft London Robert Hale pp 35 62 1989 ISBN missing Foltz Tanice G 2000 Review of A Community of Witches Contemporary Neo Paganism and Witchcraft in the United States Contemporary Sociology 29 6 840 842 doi 10 2307 2654107 JSTOR 2654107 Doyle White Ethan 2015 Wicca History Belief amp Community in Modern Pagan Witchcraft Liverpool University Press pp 160 162 Simons Patricia September 2014 The Incubus and Italian Renaissance art Source Notes in the History of Art 34 1 1 8 doi 10 1086 sou 34 1 23882368 JSTOR 23882368 S2CID 191376143 Hutton Ronald 16 March 2018 Witches and Cunning Folk in British Literature 1800 1940 Preternature Critical and Historical Studies on the Preternatural 7 1 27 doi 10 5325 preternature 7 1 0027 hdl 1983 c91bdc34 80d8 49f6 92df 9147f2bef535 ISSN 2161 2188 S2CID 194795666 Archived from the original on 18 May 2021 Retrieved 18 May 2021 Works cited Edit Cai L 2014 Witchcraft and the Rise of the First Confucian Empire State University of New York Press ISBN 978 1438448497 Gittins Anthony J 1987 Mende Religion Studia Instituti Anthropos Nettetal Steyler Verlag 41 Janzen John M MacGaffey Wyatt 1974 An Anthology of Kongo Religion Primary Texts from Lower Zaire University of Kansas Publications in Anthropology Lawrence 5 Pocs E 1999 Between the Living and the Dead A Perspective on Witches and Seers in the Early Modern Age Hungary Central European University Press ISBN 978 9639116191 Further reading EditBoyer Paul and Stephen Nissenbaum eds The Salem Witchcraft Papers Verbatim Transcripts of the Legal Documents of the Salem Witchcraft Outbreak of 1692 Volumes I and II New York Da Capo Press 1977 ISBN missing Bristol J C 2007 Christians Blasphemers and Witches Afro Mexican Ritual Practice in the Seventeenth Century Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press Davies O 2013 America Bewitched The Story of Witchcraft After Salem Oxford Oxford University Press Epstein I 2008 The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Children s Issues Worldwide Greenwood Press Ginzburg Carlo Translated by Raymond Rosenthal 2004 Originally published in Italy as Storia Notturna 1989 Giulio Einaudi Ecstasies Deciphering the Witches Sabbath University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226296937 Goss D K 2008 The Salem witch trials Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN missing Hall David ed Witch hunting in Seventeenth century New England A Documentary History 1638 1692 Boston Northeastern University Press 1991 Hill F 2000 The Salem witch trials reader Cambridge MA Da Capo Press ISBN missing Hyatt Harry Middleton Hoodoo conjuration witchcraft rootwork beliefs accepted by many Negroes and white persons these being orally recorded among Blacks and whites s n 1970 ISBN missing Kent Elizabeth Masculinity and Male Witches in Old and New England History Workshop 60 2005 69 92 Levack Brian P ed The Oxford Handbook of Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe and Colonial America 2013 excerpt and text search Lima R 2005 Stages of Evil Occultism in Western Theater and Drama University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0813123622 Mann B A 2000 Iroquoian Women The Gantowisas Peter Lang ISBN 9780820441535 pp 319 20 Murray D 2013 Matter Magic and Spirit Representing Indian and African American Belief University of Pennsylvania Press Narby J 1998 The Cosmic Serpent DNA and the Origins of Knowledge TarcherPerigee Pentikainen J 1978 Marina Takalo as an Individual in Oral Repertoire and World View An Anthropological study of Marina Takalo s Life History F F Communications Turku 93 219 58 76 INIST 12698358 Pentikainen Juha The Supernatural Experience F Jstor 26 February 2007 Rasbold K 2019 Crossroads of Conjure The Roots and Practices of Granny Magic Hoodoo Brujeria and Curanderismo Llewellyn Worldwide Richards J 2019 Backwoods Witchcraft Conjure amp Folk Magic from Appalachia Weiser Books Ruickbie Leo 2004 Witchcraft out of the Shadows A History London Robert Hale ISBN missing Williams Howard 1865 The Superstitions of Witchcraft London Longman Green Longman Roberts amp Green via Project Gutenberg External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Witchcraft nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Witchcraft nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Witchcraft nbsp Scholia has a topic profile for Witchcraft Witchcraft on In Our Time at the BBC Kabbalah On Witchcraft A Jewish view Audio chabad org Jewish Encyclopedia Witchcraft Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Witchcraft amp oldid 1175923469 Navajo, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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