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Introduction to the 1948 Version
It has been
observed that "it is quite impossible to appreciate and understand
the true and inner lives of men and women in Elizabethan and Stuart
England, in the France of Louis XIII and during the long reign of his son
and successor, in Italy of the Renaissance and the Catholic Reaction - to
name but three European countries and a few definite periods - unless we
have some realization of the part that Witchcraft played in those ages
amid the affairs of these Kingdoms. All classes were affected and
concerned from Pope to peasant, from Queen to cottage girl."
Witchcraft was inextricably
mixed with politics. Matthew Paris tells us how in 1232 the Chief Justice
Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent, (Shakespeare's "gentle Hubert" in
King John), was accused by Peter do Roches, Bishop of Winchester,
of having won the favour of Henry III through "charms and
incantations". In 1324 there was a terrific scandal at Coventry when
it was discovered that a number of the richest and most influential
burghers of the town had long been consulting with Master John, a
professional necromancer, and paying him large sums to bring about by his
arts the death of Edward II and several nobles of the court. Alice Perrers,
the mistress pf Edward III, was not only reputed to have infatuated the
old King by occult spells, but her physician (believed to be a mighty
sorcerer) was arrested on a charge of confecting love philtres and
talismans. Henry V, in the autumn of 1419, prosecuted his stepmother, Joan
of Navarre, for attempting to kill him by witchcraft, "in the most
horrible manner that one could devise." The conqueror of Agincourt
was exceedingly worried about the whole wretched business, as also was the
Archbishop of Canterbury, who ordered public prayers for the King's
safety. In the reign of his son, Henry VI, in 1441, one of the highest and
noblest ladies in the realm, Eleanor Cobham, Duchess of Gloucester, was
arraigned for conspiring with "a clerk", Roger Bolingbroke,
"a most notorious evoker of demons", and "the most famous
scholar in the whole world in astrology in magic", to procure the
death of the young monarch by sorcery, so that the Duke of Gloucester,
Henry's uncle and guardian, might succeed to the crown. In this plot were
further involved Canon Thomas Southwell, and a "relapsed witch",
that is to say, one who had previously (eleven years before) been
incarcerated upon grave suspicion of black magic, Margery Jourdemayne.
Bolingbroke, whose confession implicated the Duchess, was hanged; Canon
Southwell died in prison; the witch in Smithfield was "burn'd to
Ashes", since her offence was high treason. The Duchess was sentenced
to a most degrading public penance, and imprisoned for life in Peel
Castle, Isle of Man. Richard III, upon seizing the throne in 1483,
declared that the marriage of his brother, Edward IV, with the Lady
Elizabeth Grey, had been brought about by "sorcery and
witchcraft", and further that "Edward's wife, that monstrous
witch, has plotted with Jane Shore to waste and wither his body."
Poor Jane Shore did most exemplary penance, walking the flinty streets of
London barefoot in her kirtle. In the same year when Richard wanted to get
rid of the Duke of Buckingham, his former ally, one of the chief
accusations he launched was that the Duke consulted with a Cambridge
"necromancer" to compass and devise his death.
One of the most serious and
frightening events in the life of James VII of Scotland (afterwards James
I of England) was the great conspiracy of 1590, organized by the Earl of
Bothwell. James with good reason feared and hated Bothwell, who, events
amply proved, was Grand Master of more than one hundred witches, all
adepts in poisoning, and all eager to do away with the King. In other
words, Francis Stewart, Earl of Bothwell, was the centre and head of a
vast political plot. A widespread popular panic was the result of the
discovery of this murderous conspiracy.
In France as early as 583, when
the infant son and heir of King Chilperic, died of dysentery, as the
doctors diagnosed it, it came to light that Mumolus, one of the leading
officials of the court, had been secretly administering to the child
medicines, which he obtained from "certain witches of Paris".
These potions were pronounced by the physicians to be strong poisons. In
1308, Guichard, Bishop of Troyes, was accused of having slain by sorcery
the Queen of Philip IV of France (1285-1314), Jeanne of Navarre, who died
three years before. The trial dragged on from 1308 to 1313, and many
witnesses attested on oath that the prelate had continually visited
certain notorious witches, who supplied him philtres and draughts. In
1315, during the brief reign (1314-1316) of Louis X, the eldest son of
Philip IV, was hanged Enguerrand de Marigny, chamberlain, privy councillor,
and chief favourite of Philip, whom, it was alleged, he had bewitched to
gain the royal favour. The fact, however, which sealed his doom was his
consultation with one Jacobus de Lor, a warlock, who was to furnish a
nostrum warranted to put a very short term to the life of King Louis.
Jacobus strangled himself in prison.
In 1317 Hugues Géraud, Bishop
of Cahors, was executed by Pope John XXII, who reigned 1316-1334, residing
at Avignon. Langlois says that the Bishop had attempted the Pontiff's life
by poison procured from witches.
Perhaps the most resounding of
all scandals of this kind in France was the La Voison case, 1679-1682,
when it was discovered that Madame de Montespan had for years been
trafficking with a gang of poisoners and sorcerers, who plotted the death
of the Queen and the Dauphan, so that Louis XIV might be free to wed Athénais
de Montespan, whose children should inherit the throne. The Duchesse de
Fontanges, a beautiful young country girl, who had for a while attracted
the wayward fancy of Louis, they poisoned out of hand. Money was poured
out like water, and it has been said that "the entire floodtide of
poison, witchcraft and diabolism was unloosed" to attain the ends of
that "marvellous beauty" (so Mme. de Sévigné calls her), the
haughty and reckless Marquise de Montespan. In her thwarted fury she well
nigh resolved to sacrifice Louis himself to her overweening ambition and
her boundless pride. The highest names in France - the Princesse de Tingry,
the Duchesse de Vitry, the Duchesse de Lusignan, the Duchesse de Bouillon,
the Comtesse de Soissons, the Duc de Luxembourg, the Marguis de Cessac -
scores of the older aristocracy, were involved, whilst literally hundreds
of venal apothecaries, druggists, pseudo-alchemists, astrologers, quacks,
warlocks, magicians, charlatans, who revolved round the ominous and
terrible figure of Catherine La Voisin, professional seeress,
fortune-teller, herbalist, beauty-specialist, were caught in the meshes of
law. No less than eleven volumes of François Ravaison's huge work, Archives
de la Bastille, are occupied with this evil crew and their doings,
their sorceries and their poisonings.
During the reign of Urban VIII,
Maffeo Barberini, 1623-1644, there was a resounding scandal at Rome when
it was discovered that "after many invocations of demons"
Giacinto Contini, nephew of the Cardinal d'Ascoli, had been plotting with
various accomplices to put an end to the Pope's life, and thus make way
for the succession of his uncle to the Chair of Peter. Tommaso Orsolini of
Recanate, moreover, after consulting with certain scryers and planetarians,
readers of the stars, was endeavouring to bribe the apothecary Carcurasio
of Naples to furnish him with a quick poison, which might be mingled with
the tonics and electuaries prescribed for the ailing Pontiff, (Ranke, History
of the Popes, ed. 1901, Vol. III, pp. 375-6).
To sum up, as is well observed
by Professor Kittredge, who more than once emphasized "I have no
belief in the black art or in the interference of demons in the daily life
of mortals", it makes no difference whether any of the charges were
true or whether the whole affairs were hideous political chicanery.
"Anyhow, it reveals the beliefs and the practices of the age."
Throughout the centuries
witchcraft was universally held to be a dark and horrible reality; it was
an ever-present, fearfully ominous menace, a thing most active, most
perilous, most powerful and true. Some may consider these mysteries and
cantrips and invocations, these sabbats and rendezvous, to have been
merest mummery and pantomime, but there is no question that the
psychological effect was incalculable, and harmful in the highest degree.
It was, to use a modern phrase, "a war of nerves". Jean Bodin,
the famous juris-consult (1530-90) whom Montaigne acclaims to be the
highest literary genius of his time, and who, as a leading member of the
Parlement de Paris, presided over important trials, gives it as his
opinion that there existed, no only in France, a complete organization of
witches, immensely wealthy, of almost infinite potentialities, most
cleverly captained, with centres and cells in every district, utilizing an
espionage in ever land, with high-placed adherents at court, with humble
servitors in the cottage. This organization, witchcraft, maintained a
relentless and ruthless war against the prevailing order and settled
state. No design was too treacherous, no betrayal was too cowardly, no
blackmail too base and foul. The Masters lured their subjects with
magnificent promises, they lured and deluded and victimized. Not the least
dreaded and dreadful weapon in their armament was the ancient and secret
knowledge of poisons (veneficia), of herbs healing and hurtful, a
tradition and a lore which had been handed down from remotest antiquity.
Little wonder, then, that later
social historians, such as Charles Mackay and Lecky, both absolutely
impartial and unprejudiced writers, sceptical even, devote many pages, the
result of long and laborious research, to witchcraft. The did not believe
in witchcraft as in any sense supernatural, although perhaps abnormal. But
the centuries of which they were writing believed intensely in it, and it
was their business as scholars to examine and explain the reasons for such
belief. It was by no means all mediæval credulity and ignorance and
superstition. MacKay and Lecky fully recognized this, as indeed they were
in all honesty bound to do. They met with facts, hard facts, which could
neither have been accidents nor motiveless, and these facts must be
accounted for and elucidated. The profoundest thinkers, the acutest and
most liberal minds of their day, such men as Cardan; Trithemius; the
encylcopædic Delrio; Bishop Binsfeld; the learned physician, Caspar
Peucer; Jean Bodin; Sir Edward Coke, "father of the English
law"; Francis Bacon; Malebranche; Bayle; Glanvil; Sir Thomas Browne;
Cotton Mather; all these, and scores besides, were convinced of the dark
reality of witchcraft, of the witch organization. Such a consensus of
opinion throughout the years cannot be lightly dismissed.
The literature of the subject,
discussing it in every detail, from every point of view, from every angle,
is enormous. For example, such a Bibliography as that of Yve-Plessis,
1900, which deals only with leading French cases and purports to be no
more than a supplement to the Bibliographies of Græsse, the Catalogues of
the Abbé Sépher, Ouvaroff, the comte d'Ourches, the forty-six volumes of
Dr. Hoefer, Shieble, Stanislas de Guaita, and many more, lists nearly
2,000 items, and in a note we are warned that the work is very far from
complete. The Manuel Bibliographique, 3 vols., 1912, of Albert L.
Caillet, gives 11,648 items. Caillet has many omissions, some being
treatises of the first importance. The library of witchcraft may without
exaggeration be said to be incalculable.
It is hardly disputed that in
the whole vast literature of witchcraft, the most prominent, the most
important, the most authorative volume is the Malleus Maleficarum (The
Witch Hammer) of Heinrich Kramer (Henricus Institoris) and James
Sprenger. The date of the first edition of the Malleus cannot be
fixed with absolute certainty, but the likeliest year is 1486. There were,
at any rate, fourteen editions between 1487 and 1520, and at least sixteen
editions between 1574 and 1669. These were issued from the leading German,
French and Italian presses. The latest reprint of the original text of the
Malleus is to be found in the noble four volume collection of
Treatises on Witchcraft, "sumptibus Claudii Bourgeat", 4to.,
Lyons, 1669. There is a modern German translation by J.W.R. Schmidt, Der
Hexehammer, 3 vols., Berlin, 1906; second edition, 1922-3. There is
also an English translation with Introduction, Bibliography, and Notes by
Montague Summers, published John Rodker, 1928.
The Malleus acquired
especial weight and dignity from the famous Bull of Pope Innocent VIII, Summis
desiderantes affectibus of 9 December, 1484, in which the Pontiff,
lamenting the power and prevalence of the witch organization, delegates
Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger as inquisitors of these pravities
throughout Northern Germany, particularly in the provinces and dioceses of
Mainz, Cologne, Tréves, Salzburg, and Bremen, granting both and either of
them an exceptional authorization, and by Letters Apostolic requiring the
Bishop of Strasburg, Albrecht von Bayern (1478-1506), not only to take
steps to publish and proclaim the Bull, but further to afford Kramer and
Sprenger every assistance, even calling in, if necessary, the help of the
secular arm.
This Bull, which was printed as
the Preface to the Malleus, was thus, comments Dr. H.C. Lea,
"spread broadcast over Europe". In fact, "it fastened on
European jurisprudence for nearly three centuries the duty of
combating" the Society of Witches. The Malleus lay on the
bench of every magistrate. It was the ultimate, irrefutable, unarguable
authority. It was implicitly accepted not only by Catholic but by
Protestant legislature. In fine, it is not too much to say that the Malleus
Maleficarum is among the most important, wisest, and weightiest books
of the world.
It has been asked whether
Kramer or Sprenger was principally responsible for the Malleus, but
in the case of so close a collaboration any such inquiry seems singularly
superflous and nugatory. With regard to instances of jointed authorship,
unless there be some definite declaration on the part of one of the
authors as to his particular share in a work, or unless there be some
unusual and special circumstances bearing on the point, such perquisitions
and analysis almost inevitably resolve themselves into a cloud of
guess-work and bootless hazardry and vague perhaps. It becomes a game of
literary blind-man's-bluff.
Heinrich Kramer was born at
Schlettstadt, a town of Lower Alsace, situated some twenty-six miles
southwest of Strasburg. At an early age he entered the Order of S.
Dominic, and so remarkable was his genius that whilst still a young man he
was appointed to the position of Prior of the Dominican House at his
native town, Schlettstadt. He was a Preacher-General and a Master of
Sacred Theology. P.G. and S.T.M., two distinctions in the Dominican Order.
At some date before 1474 he was appointed an Inquisitor for the Tyrol,
Salzburg, Bohemia, and Moravia. His eloquence in the pulpit and tireless
activity received due recognition at Roma, and for many years he was
Spiritual Director of the great Dominican church at Salzburg, and the
right-hand of the Archbishop of Salzburg, a munificent prelat who praises
him highly in a letter which is still extant. In the late autumn or winter
of 1485 Kramer had already drawn up a learned instruction or treatise on
the subject of witchcraft. This circulated in manuscript, and is (almost
in its entirety) incorporated in the Malleus. By the Bull of
Innocent VIII in December, 1484, he had already been associated with James
Sprenger to make inquisition for and try witches and sorcerers. In 1495,
the Master General of the Order, Fr. Joaquin de Torres, O.P., summoned
Kramer to Venice in order that he might give public lectures, disputations
which attracted crowded audiences, and which were honoured by the presence
and patronage of the Patriarch of Venice. He also strenuously defended the
Papal supremacy, confuting the De Monarchia of the Paduan
jurisconsult, Antonio degli Roselli. At Venice he resided at the priory of
Santi Giovanni e Paolo (S. Zanipolo). During the summer of 1497, he had
returned to Germany, and was living at the convent of Rohr, near
Regensburg. On 31 January, 1500, Alexander VI appointed him as Nuncio and
Inquisitor of Bohemia and Moravia, in which provinces he was deputed and
empowered to proceed against the Waldenses and Picards, as well as against
the adherents of the witch-society. He wrote and preached with great
fervour until the end. He died in Bohemia in 1505.
His chief works, in addition to
the Malleus, are: Several Discourses and Various Sermons upon
the Most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist; Nuremberg, 1496; A Tract
Confuting the Errors of Master Antonio degli Roselli; Venice, 1499;
and The Shield of Defence of the Holy Roman Church Against the Picards
and Waldenses; an incunabulum, without date, but almost certainly
1499-1500. Many learned authors quote and refer to these treatises in
terms of highest praise.
James Sprenger was born in
Basel, 1436-8. He was admitted a novice in the Dominican house of this
town in 1452. His extraordinary genius attracted immediate attention, and
his rise to a responsible position was very rapid. According to Pierre Hélyot,
the Fransican (1680-1716), Histoire des Ordres Religieux, III
(1715), ch. XXVI, in 1389 Conrad of Prussia abolished certain relaxations
and abuses which had crept into the Teutonic Province of the Order of S.
Dominic, and restored the Primitive and Strict Obedience. He was closely
followed by Sprenger, whose zealous reform was so warmly approved that in
1468 the General Chapter ordered him to lecture on the sentences of Peter
Lombard at the University of Cologne, to which he was thus officially
attached. A few years later he proceeded Master of Theology, and was
elected Prior and Regent of Studies of the Cologne Convent, one of the
most famous and frequented Houses of the Order. On 30 June, 1480, he was
elected Dean of the Faculty of Theology at the University. His
lecture-room was thronged, and in the following year, at the Chapter held
in Rome, the Master General of the Order, Fra Salvo Cusetta, appointed him
Inquisitor Extraordinary for the Provinces of Mainz, Trèves, and Cologne.
His activities were enormous, and demanded constant journeyings through
the very extensive district to which he had been assigned. In 1488 he was
elected Provincial of the whole German Province, an office of the first
importance. It is said that his piety and his learning impressed all who
came in contact with him. In 1495 he was residing at Cologne, and here he
received a letter from Alexander VI praising his enthusiasm and his
energy. He died rather suddenly, in the odour of sanctity - some
chronicles call him "Beatus" - on 6 December, 1495, at
Strasburg, where he is buried.
Among Sprenger's other
writings, excepting the Malleus, are The Paradoxes of John of
Westphalia Refuted, Mainz, 1479, a closely argued treatise; and The
Institution and Approbation of the Confraternity of the Most Holy Rosary,
which was first erected at Cologne on 8 September in the year 1475,
Cologne, 1475. Sprenger may well be called the "Apostle of the
Rosary". None more fervent than he in spreading this Dominican
elevation. His zeal enrolled thousands, including the Emperor Frederick
III, in the Confraternity of the Most Holy Rosary, which was enriched with
many indulgences by a Bull of Sixtus IV. It has been observed that the
writings of Father James Sprenger on the Rosary are well approved by many
learned men, Pontiffs, Saints and Theologians alike. There can be no doubt
that Sprenger was a mystic of the highest order, a man of most saintly
life.
The Dominican chroniclers, such
as Quétif and Echard, number Kramer and Sprenger among the glories and
heroes of their Order.
Certain it is that the Malleus
Maleficarum is the most solid, the most important work in the whole
vast library of witchcraft. One turns to it again and again with
edification and interest: From the point of psychology, from the point of
jurisprudence, from the point of history, it is supreme. It has hardly too
much to say that later writers, great as they are, have done little more
than draw from the seemingly inexhaustible wells of wisdom which the two
Dominicans, Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger, have given us in the Malleus
Maleficarum.
What is most surprising is the
modernity of the book. There is hardly a problem, a complex, a difficulty,
which they have not foreseen, and discussed, and resolved.
Here are cases which occur in
the law-courts to-day, set out with the greatest clarity, argued with
unflinching logic, and judged with scrupulous impartiality.
It is a work which must
irresistibly capture the attention of all mean who think, all who see, or
are endeavouring to see, the ultimate reality beyond the accidents of
matter, time and space.
The Malleus Maleficarum
is one of the world's few books written sub specie aeternitatis.
Montague Summers.
7 October,
1946.
In Festo
SS. Rosarii.
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