Oct
30
11:00pm
Profs & Pints Online: What Sparked Witch Burnings
By Profs and Pints
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Profs and Pints Online presents: “What Sparked Witch Burnings,” a look at the origins of Europe and North America's witch trials, with Richard Kieckhefer, professor of religious studies and history at Northwestern University and author of European Witch Trials and Magic in the Middle Ages.
Most Americans associate witch hunts with the Salem witch trials of early 1690s colonial Massachusetts, in which more than 200 people were accused, 19 ended up being executed, and several others died in jail or during interrogation. What happened in Salem, however, was not an American invention. Instead, it came about from the importation of witch hysteria from Europe, where witch persecution had started nearly a century and a half before. The Salem trials actually marked the beginning in of the end of witch trials, by calling attention to the hazards of using “spectral evidence” and creating distrust of the judicial proceedings involved.
Come join Professor Richard Kieckhefer of Northwestern University, a scholar of the late Middle Ages and leading authority on the history of witchcraft and magic, for a fascinating look at how Europe’s witch persecution began.
To get at the question of how to define a “witch trial,” he’ll look at three of the earliest cases, including the 1440 trial of Gilles de Rais, a French baron accused of conjuring demons and convicted of murdering multiple children.
He’ll also look at the factors that played a role in the rapid spread of witch hunts, including the use of torture and other inquisitorial procedures to extract false convictions, the emergence of a new mythology of witchcraft and associated fears that everyday quarrels could be linked to a pervasive conspiracies and cosmic threat, and a heavy emphasis by religious and municipal leaders on reform.
Professor Kieckhefer won’t be conjuring his statements up out of nowhere. He is the author of European Witch Trials: Their Foundations in Popular and Learned Culture, 1300-1500; Magic in the Middle Ages; Forbidden Rites: A Necromancer's Manual of the Fifteenth Century; and Hazards of the Dark Arts: Advice for Medieval Princes on Witchcraft and Magic. You'll be enchanted by the experience of listening to him.
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