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Creator
Date
1978
Location
Pennsylvania
Media format
Printed text
Extent
xviii, 218 pages
Language
English
Size
24 cm
Reference IDs
Folger bibliographic ID: 355164
Folger call number: BF1593 .P4
Folger holdings ID: 720
Accession Number: 217173
Folger call number: BF1593 .P4
Folger holdings ID: 720
Accession Number: 217173
Summary
Drawing a distinction between medieval "magic" and early modern "witchcraft," Edward Peters argues that early medieval magic was considered a practical science, requiring study and skill. But as European society became more articulate and self-conscious, the old tradition of magic as a science became associated with heresy and sorcery. Thereafter the Middle Ages knew no safe, learned magic that was not subject to accusation of diabolism in one form or another, and the magician, like the later witch, could be punished for both spiritual and temporal offenses. Through Peters's analysis of the legal, ecclesiastical, and literary responses to this problem, magic and witchcraft are located more accurately in the cultural context of the time, providing important new insights into medieval history
Notes
General notes
Includes bibliographical references and index
Contents
Introduction: Magic in Medieval Culture -- The Transformations of the Magus -- Rhetoric and Magic in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries -- Learning and Magic in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries -- The Systematic Condemnation of Magic in the Thirteenth Century -- The Sorcerer's Apprentice -- The Magician, the Witch, and the Law -- Res fragilis: Torture in Early European Law -- Nicholas Eymeric: On Heresy, Magic, and the Inquisitor -- The Magician, the Witch and the Historians
Also known as
Extended title: The magician, the witch, and the law / Edward Peters
Subjects
Related names
author: Peters, Edward, 1936-
publisher: University of Pennsylvania. Press
publisher: University of Pennsylvania. Press