Witch-hunt

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A witch-hunt is a search for people believed to be witches, individuals allegedly possessing supernatural powers that can damage others. Although belief in witchcraft and witch-hunts occur all over the world, in Europe the history of witch-hunting is usually limited to the early modern period, the "classical period of witch-hunting", when thousands of people where accused of witchcraft and executed as a result of fear, panic and organised persecution. The North-American witch-trials of Salem at the end of the 17th century were on a lesser scale but the trials were triggered by the same mechanics of fear and mass hysteria. In another modern sense, the term witch-hunt is used to describe the persecution of individuals or groups who after creating a climate of panic are discredited and accused of crimes against society. The best known example is probably the McCarthyist search for communists during the Cold War. Other contemporary witch-hunts occur in many African societies where the fear of witches causes periodic witch-hunts during which specialist witch-finders identify suspects, after which they often are put to death by a mob.

Witch-hunts in Early Modern Europe: 1500-1800

In early modern Europe there were two different concepts of witchcraft: the popular belief in witches and the intellectual concept of witchcraft that involved Satan and nocturnal meetings called Sabbaths.

Popular belief in witches

The illiterate part of the population believed in witchcraft and belief in witches was part of their life. They were convinced that witches could harm others with their evil powers and blamed all kinds of human mischiefs on 'witches'. When an animal died or a neighbour got sick, when crops had withered of there was a dry season and a shortage of water, they went searching for the 'cause' of these misfortunes. Usually they blamed a lonely eccentric or someone they considered an outsider. Women who had no family were by definition outsiders. Those among them who by nature, physical disability or a peculiar lifestyle lived in isolation from the rest of the community, ran an even greater risk to be suspected of possession of 'dark powers'.

The stereotype of the witch, as seen by the witch hunters

In the 15th century this straightforward popular concept of witchcraft was radically changed by an intellectual elite. Witches became a pagan sect of devil worshipers, a threat for the christian church. The new stereotype of the witch was totally made up, it was a fantasy, based on nothing but irrational fear and, according to some scholars, fueled by the will of the church to destroy the last roots of paganism. The book Malleus Maleficarum or Hammer of the Witches (1485-1486) written by two Dominican inquisitors Jacob Sprenger and Heinrich Kramer was a kind of handbook for the witch hunters and explained how witches could be identified and tortured to make them confess. From this and other numerous documents and descriptions of witch hunts of that period the following picture of the witch emerges:

  • A witch was a human being, usually a woman but sometimes a man or child, bound to the devil by a pact or contract and thus became his servant. A typical witch would be an elderly woman despised by her neighbours, living alone.
  • The devil appeared to her in the guise of a man. In exchange for money, or by frightening her, he made her promise to obey him.
  • A witch was able to do maleficium, causing harm to others by occult powers. She could make cattle sick, make men impotent, kill people, produce hail storms and rains and much more.
  • Witches were said to kill and eat babies because it would give them supernatural power, and they also made ointments of this meat that could kill others.
  • At regular intervals witches gathered to perform blasphemous rituals. At first these meetings were known as Synagogues, later as a Sabbaths, a reference to the Jewish Sabbath.
  • Larger Sabbats occured three or four times a year and on these occasions witches from all over the country came to the meetings.
  • Sabbaths were held at night and ended in the morning. They often took place at cemeteries, crossroads, or at the foot of the gallows.
  • To cover the great distances to the place of the Sabbath witches flew. They used flying ointment they rubbed all over their bodies. Then they flew out the window of their bedroom, flying by themselves or seated on the back of a demonic ram, goat, pig or a black horse. For the same purpose sometimes sticks, shovels, brooms and similar tools were used.
  • During the Sabbath the devil sat on an ebony throne, not in the shape of a man, but as a monstrous hybrid being, half man, half goat: a horrible black man with huge horns, blazing eyes, the beard and feet of a goat, often depicted with bird claws instead of hands.
  • This ritual on the Wiches Sabbath, the worship of the devil, was anti-Christian. The witches had to kneel down and call the devil their "Lord". The whole ritual was a parody of the Christian liturgy, like kissing the devil in three places - left foot, genitals and anus - was a parody of the Eucharist.
  • After the ceremony, the Sabbath ended in an orgy, where one meal was served with revolting substances like rotten fish, rotten meat and meat from babies. The witches formed a circle around a witch in the middle (with a candle in her anus) and danced around her to the sound of drums, trumpets and flutes. Slowly, the dance became more ecstatic and degenerated into acts of sodomy and incest where everything was allowed. The devil himself copulated with every woman, man and child.
  • When the devil sent his subjects home, he gave them the assignment to do as much maleficium as possible against their Christian neighbors.

What this early modern stereotype of the witch makes clear, is that witches in the minds of the witch persecutors were regarded as a a group that met regularly to put the Christian doctrine to shame. Although witches practiced maleficium individually, they were considered to be a sect of devil worshipers.