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Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

  

Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences

  

General History Division

 

  

 

 

 

The ‘Other’ Witches

 

The Male Witch of Early Modern Europe

 

  

  

  

  

  

A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for 

the Degree of Master of Arts

 

 

  
  

Arnon Ram

 

Under the Supervision of Dr. Ilana Krausman Ben-Amos 

 

 

  

 

September 2006

 

 

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Abstract 

Between the fifteenth and the seventeenth centuries about 110,000 people, mainly 

in Europe, were accused of causing harm to property, livestock, and people through 

supernatural means such as sorcery and witchcraft, and for turning away from their faith 

in Jesus Christ and paying worship to the devil. In the vast scholarly work that has been 

done during the past century about the witch hunts a large majority of the works have 

overlooked, sometimes intentionally and sometimes unintentionally, a part of the 

population that has been accused and executed for the crime of witchcraft as well: men. 

These papers usually focused on the large amount of female witches that were accused 

and killed, asking why, who they were, and if misogyny has had anything to do with 

these events. 

Twenty-five to thirty percent of the people accuse of witchcraft were male. This 

paper will investigate who where these people? What were they accused of, and was it 

different from the accusation leveled against the female witches? Did the intellectuals and 

demonologists of the era acknowledge the existence of the male witches? And how did 

the courts deal with these men? 

The research will show that the intellectuals did indeed know of the male witches, 

giving plenty of examples of them in their texts, though never for a moment forgetting to 

remind us that while there were male witches, they were only a minority. To these 

people, women were the majority in this sin due to the fact that they were “weaker” in 

mind, body, and spirit; but they never claimed that men were innocent of this crime. 

Both men and women were accused of rather similar crimes in the context of 

witchcraft. Both men and women were lengthily interrogated and sometimes tortured in 

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order to confess themselves as witches and reveal their accomplices. Both men and 

women were either declared witches and executed or released. The black-letter of the law 

did not differentiate between the sexes, and the men who ran the courts of law saw with 

equal severity any case that dealt with witchcraft and/or diabolical witchcraft. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Table of Contents 

 

1.  Introductions 

        iv 

1.1. Terminology 

        vi 

2.  Formation 

of 

Concept 

       1 

2.1. From 

the 

Priest 

to 

the 

Inquisitor 

     2 

2.2. The 

Ingredient 

of 

Witch 

      11 

2.3. A 

Common 

Picture 

       14 

2.4. The 

Typical 

and 

Atypical 

Witch 

     16 

3.  The Male witch and the Intellectuals of their Age 

 

 

 

18 

3.1. Formicarius by 

Johannes 

Nider 

     19 

3.2. Summis desiderentes affectibus by Pope Innocent VIII 

 

 

20 

3.3. Malleus Maleficarum by Kramer and Sprenger 

 

 

 

21 

3.4. On the Demon-Mania of Witches 

by 

Jean 

Bodin 

   24 

3.5. The Discoveries of Witchcraft by Reginald Scot 

 

 

 

25 

3.6. Demonology by King James VI of Scotland  

 

 

 

27 

3.7. Compendium Maleficarum by Francesco 

Maria 

Guazzo 

  29 

3.8. Conclusions 

        31 

4.  Cases of Male witches 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

34 

4.1. The 

Witches 

from 

Normandy      34 

4.2. The 

Examination 

of 

John 

Walsh 

     35 

4.3. The Witches from Trier 

 

 

 

 

 

 

38 

4.4. News from Scotland   

 

 

 

 

 

 

41 

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4.5. The 

Witches 

of 

Northamptonshire 

     42 

4.6. Johannes Junius, Burgomaster of Bamberg   

 

 

 

44 

4.7. The 

Witch-Trial 

at 

Lukh 

      46 

4.8. A True Relation of the Arraignment of Eighteen Witches   

 

48 

4.9. Witches 

of 

Finland 

       49 

4.10. 

Cases 

from 

Iceland 

      49 

 

5.  The Male witch   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

51 

5.1. Male 

witches 

over 

Europe 

      51 

5.1.1.  Germany 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

52 

5.1.2.  France  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

54 

5.1.3.  England 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

55 

5.1.4.  Russia  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

56 

5.1.5.  Finland 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

56 

5.1.6.  Iceland  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

57 

5.2. Demonic 

Lover 

and 

Sodomy 

      58 

5.3. Accusations   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

59 

5.4. The 

Male 

witch 

in 

Court 

      60 

6.  Conclusions         62 

7.  Appendixes         64 

7.1. Appendix 

        64 

7.2. Appendix 

        65 

8.  Bibliography 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

66 

 

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Figures 

 

1.  “Witch giving ritual kiss to devil.” Francesco Maria Guazzo, Compendium 

maleficarum (Milan, 1608), taken from Montague Summers edition (London 

1929; New York, 1988), p. 35 

 

2.  “Witches offering newborn to devil,” Francesco Maria Guazzo, Compendium 

maleficarum (Milan, 1608), taken from Montague Summers edition (London 

1929; New York, 1988), p. 16 (bottom) 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Introduction 

 

From the fifteenth to the seventeenth century, witches occupied the thoughts and 

courts of Europe. Treatises were written during those centuries about the reason for 

witches, how they were tempted, why they committed maleficium, how to identify them, 

how they acted, what they did, and also of course, why most of them were women. 

The question of gender was never really a relevant one, as the vast majority of 

those accused of witchcraft during the early modern period in Europe and New England, 

were indeed women. Many early studies,

1

 and some recent ones,

2

 treated the era of the 

witch hunt as a time of a great misogynistic crusade: the witches were women who were 

hunted down and murdered for not accepting their role in society, for knowing too much, 

for practicing “medicine” in one way or another, for being poor and alone, and generally 

for being female. Later studies suggested that women were not accused of witchcraft for 

the sole reason of being women or for falling into a certain category, but also for a 

myriad of reasons such as intra-village politics and personal relations

3

; and also that not 

all witches were women.  

                                                 

1

 A couple of the most noted of these early feminist studies are: Dworkin, A. Woman-Hating (New York: 

Dutton, 1974). B. Ehrenreich, and D. English, Witches, Midwives, and Nurses: A History of Women 
Healers
 (Old Westbury, NY: Feminist Press, 1973; London: Writers and Readers Publishing 
Cooperative, 1973).  

2

 Most notable of these is Anne L. Barstow, Witchcraze: A New History of the European Witch Hunts

(Harper Collins: San Francisco, 1994). This book has been highly criticized for being biased towards 
women, and for the author ignoring whatever evidence that does not suit her theory (i.e. ignoring the 
Icelandic witch-hunt where 92% were male witches). 

3

 R. Briggs, Witches & Neighbors (New York, 1996); Sharpe, J. A. ‘Witchcraft and women in seventeenth-

century England: some Northern evidence, in Continuity and Change 6 [2] (1991) p. 189 give us some 
examples of this.  

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It is generally accepted today that around 110,000 people were tried for the crime 

of witchcraft during those centuries and about twenty-five percent were men.

4

 While 

certainly a minority, these men were not a separate phenomenon or a clerical mistake. 

They flew under the radar, drowning in the vastness of data and evidence which placed 

the women at the center of this phenomenon, taking a dubious and unhealthy center stage, 

pushing the men, unintentionally, to the side. 

The witches of Europe were a diverse group of people from all walks of life. 

Countless studies tried to understand who was persecuted, who was prosecuted, and why. 

Most of these studies discard the male witch after calculating the male-female ratio, and 

then go on to investigate how many of the witches were single, married, divorced, or 

widowed; how many had children, what their jobs were, what their social status in the 

community was, etc. These investigations are usually approached from the female witch 

perspective. No general study of witchcraft and its victims, even those who admitted to 

being witches, can be complete without giving the same treatment to the male witches. 

This kind of a study is beyond the scope of this paper. 

In this research I intend to take a closer look at the male witches of Europe. Who 

were they and how were they depicted in comparison to the female witch? How were 

they seen, if at all, by the demonologists and intellectuals of the era? And how did the 

courts deal with them in terms of charges, treatment, and penalties? 

 

I will tackle these questions first by delving into the rise of the witchcraft belief 

and how some of these beliefs evolved from the early and middle Middle Ages to the 

early modern period; what the main accusations leveled against those accused of 

                                                 

4

 P. B. Levack, The Witch-Hunt in Early Modern Europe (London and New York: Longman, 1987), pp. 19-

22. 

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witchcraft, what Levack calls the “Cumulative Concept of Witchcraft”

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; and what the 

most common characteristics were of people who were accused of witchcraft. 

Secondly, there will be a short analysis of the scholarship on the witchcraft 

problem, written by intellectuals between the fifteenth and seventeenth centuries, and 

how they deal with the appearance, if at all, of male witches.  

But while viewing the male witches from the perspective of the intellectuals is 

important in learning who was perceived as a witch and what was expected from them, it 

does not tell us who they were. In most cases, these accused witches did not leave any 

written record in which they state their feeling and thoughts. For that, we are left with 

court records

6

 and pamphlets. The court records will also help us to piece together a 

general picture of the typical male witch, if he existed.  

 

The last chapter will begin with a description of the geographical spread of the 

male witches over Europe, and the characterization of the male witches in several 

regions. It will examine the accusations that were leveled against the male witches and 

whether they were any different from those brought against their female counterparts. 

Finally, the chapter will discuss the severity or leniency of the courts in their treatment of 

the male witch. 

 

Terminology 

 

At first I was considered using different words when referring to male and female 

witches. Wicca (for male witch), and Wicce (for female witch) were considered and then 

                                                 

5

 Ibid. p. 27. 

6

 As I am limited in my possibility of reviewing court records and pamphlets I will be relying on 

anthologies and secondary studies of these records. 

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dropped due to the current meaning of the word Wicca as a follower of the Wiccan 

religion.  

Other terms such as “sorcerer,” “warlock,” and “wizard” do not fit the idea of the 

witch, and also have different linguistic and, more important, literary connotations. 

 

For these reasons I have decided to stay with the word “witch,” as it is the 

preferred word used by scholars. The term will be used to describe both men and women 

throughout this paper, and the gender of the witch will be specified when needed.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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1

1. Formation of a Concept 

 

The idea of a man or a woman wielding supernatural powers is as old as human 

existence: the Shaman painting in the Trois Freres (Three Brothers) cave in France from 

about 18,000 B.C.E; the Codes of Hammurabi, from 1750 B.C.E., are the oldest known 

laws in history, described witchcraft as a harmful force and considered its use as a crime. 

Homer’s Odysseus comes upon the enchantress Circe on her island and she bewitches his 

crew, before turning them into swine; the Old Testament mentions witches and 

magicians, and the New Testament has characters such as Simon Magus. The second 

century Greek rhetorician and satirist Lucian of Samosata describes several witches, 

enchanters, conjurers, and necromancers in his writings, and although Lucian dismisses 

them as frauds, he nevertheless acknowledges with dismay, that there are people who 

believe in such “foolish lies.”

1

 These are only a small examples of texts that mention 

magic and its practitioners.  

In medieval and early modern Europe the cunning man and wise woman were the 

people to whom the locals would turn to for help. These “popular magicians”

2

 offered 

healing, detecting thieves, and locating lost objects or animals, and divining and fortune-

telling of all kinds. These services were especially needed by the large village 

populations who were almost devoid of policing or medical services.

3

 While the magical 

healing provided by the wise man and woman usually consisted of an folk wisdom, 

common sense remedies, and the knowledge of the healing properties of plants, it would 

                                                 

1

 A.M. Harmon, Lucian in Eight Volumes  (London, 1925), vol. III, Philopseudes, p. 381. 

2

 K. Thomas, (1971), p. 178. 

3

 While trained physicians could certainly be found and hired in the larger towns, they would be too far 

away and too expensive for the poor villagers.  

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2

also usually involve some prayer that would have to be recited or a charm that would 

have to be carried or worn for the healing to take effect. None of this was secret, and 

while the clergy certainly discouraged its flock from consulting with these wise and 

cunning people, it was a tough battle. Even as late as 1552 Bishop Latimer said in one of 

his sermons: “A great many of us, when we be in trouble, or sickness, or lose anything, 

we run hither and thither to witches, or sorcerers, whom we call wise men… seeking aid 

and comfort at their hands.”

4

 

 

Throughout the Middle Ages, church intellectuals and theologians tried to guide 

local priests on how to counter such practices, classifying them as sins and exacting 

penance from the sinners.

5

 These guidebooks had no small part in the creation of the 

witchcraft as described by the demonologists of the early modern period. 

 

From the Priest to the Inquisitor 

The descriptions of the myriad sins of witchcraft in the Malleus Maleficarum did 

not just spring from the fertile minds of its authors James Sprenger and Heinrich Krämer. 

They were rather a compilation of beliefs and stories that were already widespread in 

Europe during the fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, beliefs in the harm that 

witches could cause and their inherent and immediate danger that they posed. While 

many of these beliefs where rooted in folklore and the oral tradition, the fifteenth and 

sixteenth century demonologists were familiar with the works of theologians such as 

Regino of Prüm and Burchard of Worms. 

                                                 

4

 Sermons by Hugh Latimer, ed. G.E. Corrie, (Cambridge, P.S. 1844) p. 534, taken from K. Thomas, (1971) 

pp. 177-178 

5

 Sinner being both the wise men and women who actively practiced this “pagan magic” and those who 

would approach said practitioners. 

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3

Both Regino of Prüm and Burchard of Worms compiled penitentials (Books of 

Penance). These Libri poenitentiales, in the most direct and narrow sense, were an aid to 

the clergy: a list of sins that may be committed by any person (sometimes in the form of a 

questionnaire) and below them the appropriate penance. The first examples of this kind of 

book appeared during the sixth century in Wales and Ireland, but spread  to the rest of the 

British Isles and the continent from the seventh century.

6

  

 

Many penitentials warn against the belief in enchanters and diviners, of dancing 

in disguise, and conjuring up storms or love potions,

7

 but it is in the collection made by 

Burchard Bishop of Worms that we see the most extensive list of folk-paganism and 

magical beliefs. The twenty books known as the Decretum (c. 1002-1025) were written at 

the suggestion of the provost of Worms and with the aid of Walter, Bishop of Speyer and 

the monk Albert. The nineteenth books, known as Medicus or Corrector, deal with 

penance and spiritual ailments. And so it is Book XIX that should interest us, as it is the 

one listing all the practices and sins Burchard collected.  The Corrector goes over, in an 

interrogatory fashion, the litany of sins, urging the priest to say: “I will question thee: 

take care least at the persuasion of the devil we conceal anything,”

8

 and most sections 

start with the words “Hast thou…”  

Of the 194 sections describing the sins that make up Chapter V of Book XIX, 

about sixty touch upon pagan rituals and witchcraft.

9

 While certainly not the first to write 

about pagan practices and the various forms of witchcraft, mentions of enchanters, 
                                                 

6

 T.P., Oakley, ‘The Penitentials as Sources for Mediaeval history’ in Speculum vol. 15, no. 2 (Apr., 1940). 

p. 211. 

7

 Many examples can be found throughout the various penitentials. For reference I am using McNeill, and 

Gamer (1938). For only a small part of the many examples see pages: 198, 292, 293, 305, 329-331, 332-
336, 337-342. 

8

 McNeill and Gamer (1938) p. 325. 

9

 McNeill and Gamer (1938) p. 42. Going over the translation they provide I have found only thirty-eight 

paragraphs dealing in pagan practices, but the text found in their book is not the complete text. 

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wizards, and non-religious magic appear in the Canons of St. Patrick,

10

 and the 

Penitentials of Theodore,

11

 Bede,

12

 Columban,

13

 Silos,

14

 and others.

15

 Burchard goes into 

much more details in describing these ceremonies and beliefs, revealing his keen interest 

in the subject. 

Burchard’s list of pagan practices and magic is long and varied, and includes such 

things as hiring of diviners,

16

 collecting medicinal herbs without singing the “credo in 

Deum” and the paternoster,

17

 praying at places other than a church or another religious 

place approved by the local bishop or priest, such as “springs, or to stones or to tress or to 

crossroads.”

18

 Some of the practices and beliefs noted by Burchard would later be 

integrated into the image of the witch as described by the demonologists. 

The ‘Wild Ride’ appears in Regino of Prüms’s De synodalibus causis et 

disciplines ecclesiasticis libri duo (c. 906), a collection of instructions for the clergy.

19

 

The section on beliefs and superstitious practices can be connected to later demonological 

beliefs in the ability of witches to fly: 

“One mustn’t be silent about certain wicked women who become 

followers of Satan, seduced by the fantastic illusion of the demons, 

and insist that they ride at night on certain beasts together with 

                                                 

10

 Ibid. Canons Attributed to St. Patrick: 16, p. 78. 

11

 Ibid. The Penitential of Theodore: Book I, chap. XV, p. 198. 

12

 Ibid

Penitential Ascribed by Albers to Bede: X,  pp. 229-9. 

13

 Ibid. The Penitential of Columban: 6, pp. 252-3. 

14

 Ibid. The Penitential of Silos: VII,  p.288. 

15

 See Appendix A for a complete list of all mentions of pagan practices, magic, etc. from the Medieval 

Handbook of Penance

16

 McNeill and Gamer (1938) Corrector Book XIX, Chapter V, 60,  pp. 329-330. 

17

 Ibid. Corrector Book XIX, Chapter V, 65, p. 330. 

18

 Ibid. Corrector Book XIX, Chapter V, 66, p. 331. 

19

 Both Regino, and later by influence Burchard, attribute this passage erroneously to the Council of Ancyra 

(314). But the passage described is very similar to a passage in Pseude-Augustine, De spiritu et aima 
(799). From McNiell and Gamer (1938) p. 333 n. 34. 

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Diana, goddess of the pagans, and a great multitude of women; that 

they cover great distances in the silence of the deepest night; that 

they obey the orders of the goddess as though she were their 

mistress; that on particular nights they are called to wait on her.”

20

 

 

Approximately one hundred years later, in his own instruction book for the clergy, 

Burchard of Worms takes the above passage almost verbatim and places it in his 

Decretum (I, 94, and X, 29).

21

 The passage appears again in Burchard’s Corrector in two 

variations: a short one (XIX, 70) and a longer one (XIX, 90). Here follows the longer 

version: 

“Hast thou believed or participated in this infidelity, that some 

wicked women, turned back after Satan, seduced by illusions and 

phantoms of demons, believe and affirm: that with Diana, a 

goddess of the pagans, and an unnumbered multitude of women, 

they ride on certain beasts and traverse many areas of the earth in 

the stillness of the quite night, obey her command as if she were 

their mistress, and are called on special nights to her service? But 

would that these only should perish in their perfidy and not drag 

many with them into the ruin of the aberration. For an unnumbered 

multitude, deceived by this false opinion, believe these things to be 

true, and in believing this they turn aside from sound faith and are 

                                                 

20

 Regino II, 45. Translation taken from Ginzburg, C., Ecstasies: Deciphering the Witches’ Sabbath 

(Chicago, 1991) pp. 89-90. In the shorter version, the leader of the band of riding women is identified as 
“the witch Holda..”  

21

 J.B. Russell, Witchcraft in the Middle Ages (Ithaca and London, 1972, 1984), p. 291. 

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involved in the error of the pagans when they think there is any 

divinity of heavenly authority except the one God. … For who is 

not in night visions led out of himself, and who while sleeping 

does not see many things which he never saw while awake? Who 

then is so foolish and stupid that he supposes that those things 

which take place in the spirit only, happen also in the body? … 

Therefore it is to be openly announced to all that he who believes 

such things loses the faith; and he who has not sound faith in God 

is not His, but [belongs to him] in whom he believes, that is, the 

devil … If thou hast believed these vanities, thou shalt do penance 

for two years on the appointed fast days.”

22

  

Both sections describe the approach to and perception of witchcraft and sorcery of 

that era: (1) witchcraft and sorcery are the invention of the devil, and therefore bishops 

and priests should deal the men and women whom they find practicing these acts either 

by making them do penance or by excommunicating them; and (2) it is a deception by the 

devil imposed upon the minds of ‘wicked women.’ It happens in their imagination but the 

devil convinces them that it happens in reality. The devil deluded the people into 

believing such things; the power of the devil is over the mind with its illusions, not in 

reality over the body. 

Burchard is more skeptical about the belief in the ‘wild ride’ than Reigno. His 

main goal was to discourage the belief in the practices, not to condemn the practices 

themselves. If nobody believes in the practices then they would die out. 

                                                 

22

 McNiell and Gamer (1938), Corrector Book XIX, Chapter V, 90, pp. 332-333. 

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7

But the practices, apparently, did not die out. One of Burchard’s greatest 

successes is in preserving this great knowledge of practices and ‘superstitions.’ This is 

how the ‘wild ride’ appears in the Malleus malleficarum, almost four and a half centuries 

later: 

“It must not be omitted that certain wicked women, perverted by 

Satan and seduced by the illusions and phantasms of devils, 

believe and profess that they ride in the night hours on certain 

beasts with Diana, the heathen goddess, or with Herodias, and with 

a countless number of women, and that in the untimely silence of 

night they travel over great distances of land.”

23

 

 

 

The night flight with Diana appears in three different places in the Malleus.

24

 

Krämer has copied Burchard’s text almost word for word. But while for Regino and 

Burchard these were fantasies and illusions created by the devil, Krämer rejected the idea 

that it was all in the mind of the person, and insisted that the devil could indeed transport 

people from one place to another

25

 just as he had Jesus Christ.

26

 

Another good example is of sex and love magic. The Malleus maleficarum is full 

of descriptions of sex crimes committed by male and female witches, from copulation 

with devils (Incubi or Succubi) to causing impotence,

27

 and to inciting love and hate in 

                                                 

23

 

Heinrich (Institoris) Krämer, and Jakob (James) Sprenger, Malleus Maleficarum (1487), ed. and trans. 

M. Summers  (London, 1928; repr. 1948), Part I, Question X, p. 62.

 

24

 Ibid. Malleus Maleficarum Part I, Question I; Part I, Question X; Part II, Question I, Chapter III. 

25

 Ibid. Malleus Maleficarum Part II, Question I, Chapter III deals in its entirety on this subject. 

26

 Ibid. p. 106 and Mathew 4:1-11; Luke 4:1-15.  

27

 Malleus Maleficarum Part I, Questions: II, VI, VIII, IX; Part II, Question I, Chapters: IV, V, VI, VII, 

Question II, Chapters: II, IV. These are only the chapters that deal directly with sexual related magic; 
there are references to sexual acts and “crimes” throughout the whole of the book. 

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8

the minds of men. Krämer returns again and again to these crimes, which he sees as of 

utmost importance. 

The following are two ‘crimes’ related to love and sex from the Corrector

“Hast thou ever believed or participated in this perfidy, that 

enchanters and those who say that they can let loose tempests 

should be able through incantation of demons to arouse tempests or 

to change the minds of men?”

28

 

 “Hast thou done what some adulteresses are wont to do? When 

first they learn that their lovers wish to take legitimate wives, they 

thereupon by some trick of magic extinguish the male desire, so 

that they are impotent and cannot consummate their union with 

their legitimate wives.”

29 

 

Stories of ‘curses’ of impotence being placed on people appear in several 

eleventh- and twelfth-century writings. One such tale is told by the monk Guibert of 

Nogent, who recounts how his father was “cured” of impotence by an old woman.

30

 The 

fact that the curse had been removed by an old woman did not appear to bother the monk 

very much. 

Master Gratian, the compiler of the Concordia Discordantium Canonum 

(Concordance of Discordant Canons) (c.1140), refers to magic in Causa 26

31

 and in 

                                                 

28

 McNiell and Gamer (1938), Corrector Book XIX, Chapter V, 68, p. 331. 

29

 McNiell and Gamer (1938), Corrector Book XIX, Chapter V, 186, p. 340. 

30

 E. Peters, ‘The Medieval Church and State on Superstition, Magic and Witchcraft: from Augustine to the 

Sixteenth Century’ in Ankraloo and Clark (eds.) Witchcraft and Magic in Europe: the Middle Ages 
(Philadelphia, 2002), p. 205. 

31

 This Causa gives the story of a priest who was also a magician and refused to repent when confronted by 

his bishop, and so was excommunicated. 

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9

Causa 33 which discuss sexual impotence and the dissolution of marriage. This Causa is 

divided into four questions, the last one dealing with magic that induces impotence: 

“If sexual intercourse cannot be performed, whether because of 

concealed  sortilaria or maleficia, but never by an unjust 

permission of God, and with the devil aiding… By exorcisms and 

other ecclesiastical practices the ministers of the church may 

help…”

32

 

 

 

What was once considered a “trick of magic” was, in the middle of the twelfth 

century, considered as done with the devil’s aid, and had to be treated much the same 

way a possessed person should be treated.  

 

By the fifteenth century, the witch’s power, or the power of the devil used by the 

witches, influenced not only the procreation process of men and women, but also that of 

animals. One of the chapters on this maleficia in the Malleus  starts: “Concerning the 

method by which they obstruct the procreant function both in men and animals, and in 

both sexes …”

33

 For Krämer and Sprenger there is no doubt about the true power of the 

devil and his minions the witches; the punishment for the unrepentant is no longer 

excommunication but death. 

Skepticism about the activities and supposed power of witches was apparent in 

the writing of the scholars and theologians of the church up to the twelfth century. Of 

course those activities were strongly condemned; the further certain activities and 

                                                 

32

 A.C. Kros, and E. Peters, (eds.) Witchcraft in Europe 400-1700 a Documented History (Philadelphia, 

2001

2

), Decretum Gratiani… Una cum glossiCausa 33, question I, canon 4, Si per sortiarias (casus), 

pp. 76-77 (italics added). 

33

 Summers (trans) (1928), Malleus Maleficarum, Part II, Question I, Chapter VI. p. 117. 

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10

practices deviated from the normative religious path, the harsher the penance and 

punishment.

34

 The spread of Christianity over Europe was complete, and the gods of the 

pagans, those who had been turned into demons, were slowly losing their powers. They 

could not do much harm to believers of the true faith. 

 

But as we have seen, the beliefs in those practices did not disappear as the church 

wished them to. They cropped up among the laity from time to time, in confessions or 

something overheard by the local priest. Clarifications on how to undermine these beliefs 

had to be given.  

The churchmen did not sit idly. Satan and his horde of demons had a role to play, 

and Satan’s power and influence was worrisome to say the least. Synthesis of beliefs in 

sorcery and magic merged with demonological tracts, giving birth to diabolical sorcery 

and witchcraft.  

By the fifteenth century, there were still a few skeptics about the nature and truth 

of sorcery and witchcraft.

35

 Though it was already accepted by his time, the first thing 

that Krämer did in the Malleus malleficarum was to insist that witches were indeed real, 

that the devil could exert power over the minds of men and women – with the permission 

of God

36

 – and that to deny it is heresy.

37

  

 

 

 
                                                 

34

 Kross and Peters (2001

2

) pp. 2-5; (2002) pp. 205-206. 

35

 Most of those skeptics about witchcraft, such as Reginald Scot, Thomas Hobbes, and Friedrich Spee 

wrote during the sixteenth and seventeenth century. 

36

 This is explained in Part I, Question XII of the Malleus maleficarum: “Whether the Permission of 

Almighty God is an Accompaniment of Witchcraft.” 

37

 The title for Part I, Question I in the Malleus maleficarum is: “Whether the Belief that there are such 

Beings as Witches is so Essential a Part of the Catholic Faith that Obstinacy to maintain the Opposite 
Opinion manifestly savours of Heresy.” 

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11

The Ingredient of a Witch 

 

By the time the Malleus was published, the intellectuals writing about witches 

already had a set of beliefs that they applied to all witches. The most important of these 

beliefs was that of the witch’s pact with the Devil. It was this pact, performed face-to-

face, that gave the witch the power to perform maleficium, harmful magic, and also 

brought the witch into the Devil’s service. For in fact, as the educated of Europe believed, 

the witch was the servant, or rather the slave of the Devil, in contrast to the educated 

court ‘magicians’ of old.  

King James I of England wrote:  

“Surelie, the difference vulagar put betweixt them, is verrie merrie, 

and in a maner true; for they say, that the Witches ar servants 

onelie, as slaues to the Devil; but the Necromanciers are his 

maisters and commanders.”

38

  

 

These necromancers, also known as magi, were men who would conjure spirits 

and summon demons to gain forbidden knowledge. The practitioners of such magic were 

usually literate and well educated men, very different from the common witch who would 

later be prosecuted and hunted.

39

 It was thought that the necromancer retained some form 

of control over the Devil, but for the scholastics it was not enough. They reasoned that 

the demons would never do anything without some form of compensation or 

remuneration. Their conclusion was that these magi, just like the illiterate witch who 

helped find a stolen item, had made a pact with the Devil. The renowned thirteenth and 

                                                 

38

 James VI and I, Daemonologie;  Includes News from Scotland, on the Death of a Notable Sorcerer 

(Edinburgh, 1597; repr. New York, 1966), p. 9. 

39

 Levack (1987), p. 33. 

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12

fourteenth century Italian canonist Giovanni d’Andrea (Johannes Andreae) wrote: “Those 

are to be called heretics who forsake God and seek the aid of the Devil.”

40

 

 

And so, all magic was derived from the Devil, even the simple peasant magic. 

This magic was acquired through a pact with the Devil, with the witch paying homage to 

the Devil by bowing down before him or kissing his buttocks; often by renouncing the 

Christian faith and trampling on the cross for good measure. The Devil would mark the 

witch’s body as a sign of her allegiance to him; in addition the witch will usually be 

given some material good y, which will later turn out to be animal dung or some other 

useless material. The devil always seemed to have the upper hand, and the witches and 

those who wanted to or were seduced to become witches, never seemed to learn any 

better. The Kentish gentleman Reginald Scot wrote in his Discoverie of Witchcraft

“ALAS! If they were so subtill, as witchmongers make them to be, 

they would espie that it were mere follie for them, not onelie to 

make a bargaine with the divell to throw their soules into hell fire, 

but their bodies to the tortures of temporall fire and death, for the 

accomplishments of nothing that may benefit themselves at all… 

Yhea, if they were sesibe, they would saie to the divell; Whie 

should I hearken to you, when you will deceive me? Did you not 

promise my neighbout mother Dutton to save and rescue hir; and 

yet lo she is hanged? Surelie this would appose the divell verie 

sore. And it is a wonder, that none, from the beginning of the 

                                                 

40

 J. Hansen, Zauberwahn, Inquisition, und Hexenprozess im Mittelalter und die Entstehung de grossen 

Hexenverfolgung (Munich: 1901, 1964) p. 240, taken from Russel, (1974) p. 174. 

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13

world, till this daie, hath made this and such like objections, 

whereto the divell could never make answer.”

41

 

 

 

Closely related to the belief in the pact with the Devil, was the belief that those 

who had made such pacts secretly met in remote locations to worship him. These 

meetings would include cannibalistic infanticide, naked dancing, ritual intercourse with 

the Devil, wild orgies which included heterosexual as well as homosexual

42

 activities, 

gluttony, preparations of unguents and potions, and in some cases a parody of the 

Catholic Mass.

43

 These accounts bear a great similarity to the assemblies ascribed to 

heretics such as the Waldensians and the Cathars, to the early Christians by the Romans, 

and Bacchanalia of the ancient Greeks. But the beliefs in the witches’ Sabbath and the 

pact with the Devil were not interdependent, and references to the Sabbath did not appear 

in many witch trials. Even the Malleus Malificarum had little to say about these meetings 

of worship. 

 

Flight was another element commonly associated with the witches, and one that is 

closely related to the Sabbath. At times, the Sabbath was held in very far away places, 

and the only way for witches to get there way by flying great distances on animals, 

pitchforks, brooms, or by transforming themselves into animals.

44

  

 

To conclude, what Levack calls the ‘Cumulative Concept of Witchcraft’

45

 is the 

combination of several beliefs: the pact with the Devil, from which the witch gains the 

power to cause maleficium, harmful magic; the Sabbath, where witches congregate to 

                                                 

41

 Reginald Scot, The Discoverie of Witchcraft (London: 1584), Book III, Chapter VIII, p. 29 

42

 Homosexual should be understood as same-sex, and thus can be used for both women and men. 

43

 Accounts of the parody appear mainly in French, Spanish and Italian assemblies. Levack (1987), p. 37. 

44

 The belief in the flight has been discussed above. 

45

 Levack (1987), p. 27. 

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14

worship the Devil by performing obscene sexual rituals, cannibalism, and infanticide; and 

the ability to fly, closely related to the witches’ Sabbath. While not all of these concepts 

had to be mentioned in the witch trials, the main ingredient always was the individual or 

collective worship of the Devil. 

 

A Common Picture 

 

After observing several trials and reading about others, Reginal Scot describes the 

typical witch as “commonly old, lame, bleare-eied, pale, and full of wrinkles,”

46

 and 

“toothless, old, important, and unweldie woman.”

47

 

In 1646, a clergyman by the name of John Gaule published a tract attacking 

witch-hunting; in one passage he describes his fear of what could happen when 

inquisitions and accusations go unchecked: 

”… every old woman with a wrinkled face, a furr’d brow, a hairy 

lip, a gobber tooth, a squint eye, a squeaking voyce, of a scolding 

tongue, having a ragged coate on her back, a skullcap on her head, 

a spindle in her hand, and a dog or cat by her side; is not only 

suspected, but pronounced for witch.”

48

 

 

 

Both Scot and Gaule, writing against the witch-hunts,

49

 described the most 

common witch they knew: the old woman. The fact that they were both using these 

                                                 

46

 Scot (1584), Book I, Chapter III, p. 4. 

47

 Ibid, Book I, Chapter VI, p. 8. 

48

 J.A Sharpe, (ed.) English Witchcraft, 1560-1736 (London, 2003). vol. 3, John Gaule, Select Cases of 

Conscience touching Witches and Witchcrafts (1646). 

49

 John Gaule attacked witch-hunting and the method by which it was done, especially by Hopkins, yet 

contrary to Scot, he believed in the power of the devil and that witches were a real threat. 

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15

descriptions to ridicule the amount of power witch-mongers ascribed to such wretched 

beings does not make it any less true. Unknowingly, they helped set the image of the 

stereotypical witch that would persist well into modern times. 

 

The typical witch of the early modern period has been discussed countless times 

in many scholarly works.

50

 I will not repeat their words here, but will go over the main 

points. 

Sex:  The typical witch of the early modern period, not only in contemporary 

books and tracts about witchcraft, but also in the surviving court records and pamphlets, 

is a woman. Female witches constitute about seventy-five percent of all defendants 

brought to the courts of Europe. Like any statistic, it breaks down once we take a closer 

look at each area. 

Age: Witches were old. The majority of those prosecuted for witchcraft were over 

50 years old, an old age in those times. Most researchers mentioning the age of the witch 

refer to them as women and will explain why more old than young women were accused. 

This is consistent with the neglect of male witches in the academic literature. In general, 

studies divide the witches into age groups and then explain the reason for one age group 

being more prosecuted than another from the female witch perspective, as if all the cases 

used for the statistic were female cases. I have yet to see a study classifying male witches 

by age and explaining the reason for the division.

51

 

Marital Status: It is hard to ascribe a specific marital status to the witches. While 

we can say almost for certain that there were more unmarried than married witches 

                                                 

50

 R. Briggs, Witches & Neighbors (New York, 1996). Levack (1987), Russell (1972), and G. R Quaife, 

Godly Zeal and Furious Rage (Kent, 1987) just to name a few. 

51

 It is possible that such a study exists but if so, I have not come across it. Such a study, should be very 

interesting and enlightening, but is sadly out of the scope of this paper.  

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16

among the females, the majority is not by a great margin. Among the unmarried, there 

were more widows than women who had never married. 

Economic Status: Most witches were poor, beggars, and vagabonds, as these were 

usually also the weakest and most vulnerable members of the community. This is found 

in many of the demonological and skeptical texts from the period. But there are always 

exceptions, where a wealthy merchant or other prominent members of a community 

would be accused of witchcraft. Reasons could be jealousy, the wish to acquire the 

accused witch’s property, or a political vendetta. 

 

The Typical and Atypical Witch 

 

If we look at the continent of Europe, the male witch was automatically an 

atypical witch. The demonologists usually pointed at the ‘weaker’ female sex, while the 

skeptics, having read the demonological tracts and seen the witch trials, usually tried to 

refute the theories of the demonologists by responding that female witches could not have 

all the powers that were attributed to them. Very rarely, if at all, did the skeptics talk 

about male witches. 

 

But by breaking down the general statistic of Europe into countries, and even 

provinces, we see a different portrait. In Estonia, Normandy, and especially Iceland, male 

witches were typically accused, and the female witches took second place. By the same 

token, examination of the writings of some of the European witchcraft experts, it is easy 

to notice how many of them neglected gender.

52

  

Women were more prone to fall into demonism and diabolical witchcraft than 

men, this was taken for granted by the intellectuals; but there are male witches as well, 
                                                 

52

 S. Clark, Thinking with Demons (Oxford: 1997), pp. 116-117. 

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17

they tell us, as men may be weak or become greedy for power. The next chapter will 

discuss this issue. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

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18

2. The Male Witch and the Intellectuals  

 

 

The past several decades has shown an increase in interest in the study of 

witchcraft and its roots. Many studies have focused on the extreme misogyny of the 

treatises written by the witch experts, and how these treatises increased hatred of women 

in Europe. But the ideas about women in these treatises are not new, and they were 

present in European society even when Aristo claimed that women were deformed males. 

The Church Fathers did not do much to eliminate such thought, and the faults and 

weaknesses of women were written about and debated throughout the Middle Ages.

53

 

Nor is there anything new in the Malleus Maleficarum; it simply builds on the general 

principle that women are weaker than men.  

 

But when we take a closer look at these treatises, we see that their authors did not 

neglect the male witches, they found him just as present and as dangerous as any female 

witch. Unlike some modern scholars who studied the period of the witch-hunts and the 

demonological tracts written during that period, the demonologists did not believe that 

witchcraft was sex-specific. 

The following chapter will review the demonological treatises written during the 

fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries, and infer from this body of literature how 

their authors saw the phenomena of male witches. 

The treatises are listed chronologically by date of publication. 

 

 

                                                 

53

 Ibid. pp.112-11.8 

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19

Formicarius by Johannes Nider [1435-38]

54

 

 

Johannes Nider (1380-1438) was a Dominican Brother from about 1402. He 

studied philosophy and theology in the universities of Vienna and Cologne, and was later 

prior of the convent in Nuremberg and later of the convent at Basel. From 1436 until his 

death two years later he was dean of the theological faculty in Vienna. 

 The 

Formicarius (The Ant-Colony) is his best known work which explores the 

philosophical and theological questions of the day, and discusses some ecclesiological 

reforms. The five-part book takes the form of a dialogue between a doubter and 

theologian; the fifth part describes the activities of evildoers and people who practice 

witchcraft.  

 

Nider praises Peter von Greyrz, a judge from Bren “… who has burned many 

witches of both sexes…” Peter relates various tales to Nider including one about a man 

named Stadelin

55

 who caused the loss of fertility in a certain household. He also speaks of 

Scavius, who could transform himself into a mouse; and his disciple Happo, who was 

Stadelin’s teacher, and together they caused sterility and hailstorms, traveled through the 

air, and injured people and property, and inflicted other sorts of mischief. Nider also 

gives the example of a confession of a monk named Benedict who, before joining the 

Benedictine Order, had been “… a Necromancer, juggler, buffoon, and strolling 

player…” 

 

Even though Chapter Eight of Book Five discusses both wicked and good women, 

and why women are in general more susceptible to witchcraft, it is obvious that Nider 

                                                 

54

 Kross and Peters (2001), pp. 155-159. 

55

 Stadelin is also mention in the Malleus Maleficarum. 

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20

was aware of male witches, and did not see witchcraft as a sex-specific crime or heresy. 

More women yes, but not the total. 

 

Summis desiderentes affectibus by Pope Innocent VIII [1484] 

 

Pope Innocent VIII was born Giovani Battisata Cibo in Genoa (1432-1492) and 

was raised to papacy in 1484. Like other popes of that era, Innocent was worried about 

heresy and acted to stop it. When Kramer and Sprenger approached the pope with tales of 

their difficulties with the local ecclesiastical authorities in prosecuting heretical 

witchcraft, Innocent VIII issued this bull. While for a long time it has been considered to 

be the instigator of the great witch-hunts of Europe, it is very similar to other papal 

documents on heresy, disbelief, the duty to preach the right way of the religion, and to 

prosecute those who do not follow the right path.

56

 Its great influence, so to speak, comes 

from its association with the Malleus Maleficarum

 The 

Summis desiderantes starts by denouncing heresy and to correct those who 

are in error, and then goes on at length on the crimes of witchcraft, urging the prosecution 

of such people, and ordering that the inquisitors doing so not be hindered.  

Pope Innocent VIII at no point in the text accuses a certain group of people of 

witchcraft, or identifies them as the majority of witches, sorcerers, or enchanters. After 

naming the geographical areas which he believed to be infested with witches, he writes:  

“… many persons of both sexes, unmindful of their own salvation and 

straying from the Catholic Faith, have abandoned themselves to the 

devils, incubi and succubi…”  

                                                 

56

 Other popes who acted against sorcery and the heresy of witchcraft are John XXII, Eugenius IV, and 

Nicholas V. 

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21

 

Clearly male witches are not unheard of and are not an uncommon sight. And 

since the bull was elicited by those who would later write the Malleus Maleficarum, they 

too must have heard of and seen male witches, maybe even prosecuted some. 

 

Malleus Maleficarum by Heinrich Kramer (Institoris) and James Sprenger [1487] 

 

The ‘Hammer of the Witches’ made its appearance in 1487 and was printed with 

the Papal Bull Summis desiderentes of Innocent VIII as a preface, to it so as to lend it 

more credit, and with an “Official letter of approbation” from the Faculty of Theology of 

the University of Cologne. This is problematic in and of itself as, it had been arranged 

through a series of academic negotiations.

57

  

It was written by two Dominican inquisitors: Heinrich Krämer (Institoris) and 

James (Jakob) Sprenger.

58

 Krämer was neither well respected nor liked. Named inquisitor 

in 1474 he quickly became involved in witchcraft trials. His views on witchcraft were 

considered extreme by most of his fellow clergymen, as well as the secular authorities, 

who opposed him in his trials. In 1485 Krämer officiated over a large trial in Innsbruck 

where fifty-seven people were investigated, Institoris was apparently so intrigued by the 

witches’ sexual behavior that it irritated the local bishop who halted the trials.

59

 Sprenger 

joined the Dominicans and studied later in Cologne where he became a professor of 

                                                 

57

 Peters (2002), p. 239. 

58

 Sprenger’s role in the project is now generally doubted. See: Anglo (1977); Segl (1988); Bibliotheca 

Lamiarum (1994: 107-10), references taken from Peters (2002) p. 239. 

59

 Russell (1972), pp.230-231; L. Apps and A. Gow, Male Witches in Early Modern Europe (Manchester, 

2003) pp. 19-20 n. 6. 

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22

theology; he was inquisitor in the Rhineland in 1470 and worked with Krämer, until he 

was “sickened” by his colleague.

60

 

The  Malleus was an Inquisitorial handbook and had a scholastic organization, 

starting with a question, opposing arguments and lastly conclusions.

61

 It is divided into 

three parts. The first part proves the existence of sorcery and witchcraft, why women are 

more vulnerable to it, and how the devil ensnares them. Part Two describes the kinds of 

witches, their powers and how to destroy them and cure these spells. Part three deals with 

the judicial proceedings, in both ecclesiastical and civil courts, how to recognize a witch, 

and how to destroy a witch.  

 The 

Malleus is arguably the most misogynistic of all demonological treatises. 

Almost every chapter in the books explains how dangerous and weak women are, and 

consequently how susceptible they are to the devil’s machinations. But even in the 

Malleus Maleficarum we see plenty of male witches. 

According to Institoris and Sprenger, there were three kinds of male witch.

62

 The 

first and most dangerous were the Archer-Wizards.

63

 After shooting arrows at the crucifix 

on Good Friday and uttering some form of apostasy to the Devil, these men could shoot 

with high precision. They could kill three or four men a day, as long as they were looking 

at the man they wanted to kill, the Devil would guide the arrow to the victim. 

 

The second type of male witch was just as sacrilegious and, according to the 

Malleus, should be treated just as harshly as the Archer-Wizards. These male witches 

defile the image of Christ to become immune from harm. For example, if they wished to 

                                                 

60

 Russell (1972), p. 231. 

61

 Idem. 

62

 Summers (trans) (1928),  Malleus maleficarum Part II, Question I, Chapter XVI, pp. 150-154 

63

 I use the word ‘Wizard’ reluctantly. As I do not have the Latin version of the text, I assume it was thus 

translated so as to differentiate it from the witch, which the translator probably saw as inherently female. 

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23

have their arms immune, they broke the arms of the crucified figure of Christ and carried 

them at all times.

64

 

 

The last type of the male witches described by the Malleus is the least dangerous. 

Such a witch could enchant weapons to protect himself from being hurt by them, and to 

use certain secret words and signs to do minor tricks with charms or such things. These 

witches should not be dealt with as harshly as the Archer-Wizard since they do not 

always know that they have sinned. Some believing that they are saying prayers, and 

should be allowed to mend their ways if they show contrition.

65

 

But these crimes are not the only witchcraft practiced by male witches. The 

Malleus agreed that both men and women could perform almost any kind of maleficium. 

Some crimes were attributed more to one sex than to the other. Crimes associated with 

the killing or injury of infants and babies, even still in the mothers’ womb, were 

associated with women. Men were not part of the birth process, and of all women, 

midwives had the best access to fetuses and newborns.

66

 There were few exceptions, such 

as Stedelein, a male witch, who successively killed seven children in one woman’s womb 

so that she miscarried for many years afterwards.

67

 

The  Malleus’ bias against women is stated clearly on almost every page. 

However, the authors used both masculine and feminine forms of the word maleficus

They used the masculine plural term to describe large groups, which might comprise 

witches of both sexes. They also used the masculine singular form. A word count done by 

                                                 

64

 Summers (trans) (1928), Malleus maleficarum, Part II, Question I, Chapter XVI. p. 154. 

65

 Ibid. pp. 154-155. 

66

 Ibid. Part I, Question XI, p. 66. 

67

 Ibid. Part II, Question I, Chapter VI, p. 118. 

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24

Apps and Gow show how many times witches were referred to as masculine and how 

many as feminine: out of 650 references, 197, or about thirty percent, are masculine.

68

 

 

On the Demon-Mania of Witches by Jean Bodin [1580] 

 

Unlike most proponents of witchcraft, Bodin (1529-1596) was not a monk or a 

clergyman; he was a professor of law at Toulouse, royal adviser to the king of France, 

and a public prosecutor at Laon. He wrote treatises on the philosophy of history, political 

theories, and was a defender of religious tolerance. That is why it is interesting to note 

that Jean Bodin was so firm and fierce in his belief in the existence of witchcraft, and in 

the need to prosecute and eliminate this imminent threat. He even accused skeptics of 

witchcraft.

69

  Demonomanie des sorciers was one of the most widely-read treatises on 

demonology of the era. 

 

Bodin believed that rumors of witchcraft were almost always true, and so, it was 

essential to pursue a suspect till he of she were accused and dealt with, using torture even 

if the suspect was disabled, very young, or very old. If correct procedures were taken, 

every witch condemned would be rightly condemned.  

 

Bodin did not try to explain why witches were women.

70

 And while many of the 

examples he gives in his book refer to women as witches, some male witches present 

themselves. Court magicians, for example, are very dangerous in Bodin’s eyes, for they 

are close to the ruler of the land and may use their influence and power to destroy the 

state, “For it is stated that if there is a sorcerer who follows the court, of magician, or 

soothsayer, or augurer or one interpreting dreams by divining art, of whatever rank and 

                                                 

68

 Apps and Gow (2003), p. 104. 

69

 Bodin accused Johann Weyer of witchcraft and called for his prosecution. 

70

 Clark (1997), p. 116. 

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however great a lord he might be, he shall be exposed to torment and torture without 

making allowances for his rank.”

71

 Bodin was also worried about priests who had made a 

pact with the devil: “How much more punishable then is the sorcerer-priest who, instead 

of consecrating, blasphemes execrably. This is way Plato makes foremost among his laws 

one which requires that the sorcerer-priest be put to death without remission. For the 

indecency of the sorcery is much more atrocious in one who handles sacred things.”

72

 

 

The Discoveries of Witchcraft by Reginald Scot [1584] 

By 1597 Scot’s book was well enough known that King James I wrote the 

following into the preface of his own book, explaining why he saw fit to write a book 

about witchcraft: 

“… against the damnable opinion of two principally in our age, 

wherof the one called SCOT an Englishman, is not ashamed in publike 

print to denay, that there can be such a thing as Witch-craft…”

73

  

 

By 1603 King James I ordered all existing copies of Scot’s book to be burned. If 

they had still been alive, no doubt Sprenger, Institoris, and some of the other 

“witchmongers” would have used much harsher terms and would have joined in on the 

burning. 

 

Reginald Scot was born to a respected Kentish family in 1538. He studied, but 

never completed his degree, in Harts Hall, Oxford. After that he settled in Kent in a 

private business and was active in public life till his death on October 9, 1599. The 

                                                 

71

 Bodin, On the Punishment that Witches Merit, from Kros and Peters

2

 p. 294. 

72

 Ibid. p. 299. 

73

 Demonology, The Preface to the Reader, p. xi. 

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26

Discoveries is a thorough book, and in writing it, Scot tested some spells and demonic 

conjuration to see if they really worked, interviewed alleged witches, and kept up-to-date 

on the demonological literature of his time.  

 

Throughout his book, whenever Scot writes about a witch, or about what a witch 

does, he refers to the witch as a ‘she.’ Witches, in Scot’s writing, are usually described 

thus:  

“One sort of such as are said to bee witches, are women which be 

commonly old, lame, bleare-eied, pale, fowle, and full of 

wrinkles;…”

74

 

 

And: 

“And we see, that ignorant, and impotent women, or witches, are the 

causes of incantations and charmes… For Alas! What an unapt 

instrument is a toothles, old, impotent, and unweldie woman to flie in 

the aier? Truelie, the devil little needs such instruments to bring his 

purposes to passe.”

75

 

 

 

His view is not exclusive, he does cite examples of male witches from the 

Malleus Maleficarum and Bodin,

76

 but most of Scot’s references to men who deal in 

some sort of magic are conjurers of spirits. Some of these conjurers may be priests,

77

 

others claim to conjure the devil. In Chapter V of Book II, under Presumptions, whereby 

                                                 

74

 Scot (1584), p. 4. 

75

 Ibid. p. 8. 

76

 Ibid. pp. 26, 37, 51. 

77

 Ibid. p. 2. 

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27

witches are condemned, he asks: “Item, though a conjurer be not to be condemned for 

curing the diseased by virtue of his art: yet must a witch die for the like case.”

78

 Scot is 

skeptic of conjurers of any kind, and of witches. Only God has the power to affect the 

nature of things. To say otherwise is to take away His power. 

 

Demonology by King James VI of Scotland (I of England) [1597] 

 

King James was born in 1566 to Mary Stuart (also known as Bloody Mary), and it 

is unclear whether his father was Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, or David Rizzio, Mary’s 

Italian secretary. James’s father was murdered before his birth, leaving Queen Mary to 

the throne until she was forced to abdicate by Elizabeth I of England in 1567. James 

ascended to the throne of Scotland at thirteen months of age and lived under regencies 

until taking the throne himself. In 1603, with the death of Queen Elizabeth I, James 

became King James I of England. 

 

He believed in the “divine right of kings”

79

 and so, the evil that befell his people 

was punishment by God. He believed that witches had plotted to place a curse on him, 

and while he was king of Scotland supervised the torture of those accused of witchcraft. 

King James wholeheartedly believed in witches, the “Devils ministers,” the power of 

Satan, and that by opposing them he was carrying out the duties placed upon him by God. 

 The 

Demonology was written in 1597 as a dialogue between Philomathes (the 

questioner) and Epistemon (who answers and explains). The work is divided into three 

books. Book I describes magic and proves that it exists. Book II focuses on sorcery and 

                                                 

78

 Ibid. p. 15. 

79

 A doctrine that sovereigns derive their right to rule by virtue of their birth alone—a right based on the 

law of God and of nature. Authority is transmitted to a ruler from his ancestors, whom God himself 
appointed to rule. And while his tutors Buchanan tried to instill in him the theory that the King is 
beholden to his people for his power he rejected it. 

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28

witchcraft. Book III describes spirits and demons that “troubles men or women” and 

concludes with a chapter describing the punishment that witches and magicians deserve. 

 

The book speaks of “Sorcerers” and “Witches,” “Necromancers” and 

“Enchanters,” almost always in the plural making it impossible to distinguish between 

male and female practitioners. Only in Book II Chapter V, when describing the powers of 

the witches, does he point out that there are more women than men witches: 

Epi: “… As for little trifling turnes that women haue ado with, he 

causeth them to ioynt dead corpses, & to make powders therof, 

mixing such other thinges there amongst, as he giue vnto them.” 

Phi: “But before yee goe further, permit mee I pray you to interrupt you 

on worde, which yee haue put mee in memorie of, by speaking of 

Women. What can be the cause that there are twentie women 

giuen to that craft, where ther is one man?” 

Epi: “The reason is easie, for as that sexe is frailer than man is, so is it 

easier to be intrapped in these grosse snares of the Deuill, as was 

ouer well proued to be true, by the Serpents deceiuing of Eua at 

the beginning, which makes him the homelier with that sexe 

sensine.”

80 

 

 

According to recent archival research, the ratio can more accurately be set at 

about one man for every six women.

81

 In his News from Scotland, at the end of the book, 

King James relates a trial of witches that had occurred in 1591. The principal actor in this 

                                                 

80

 Demonology, Book II, Chapter V. p. 43 (Bold added). 

81

 Apps and Gow (2003), Table 1, p. 45. Scotland 1560-1709 has a total of 2421 cases with witchcraft 

prosecution, of which 16% are male. 

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29

‘drama’ is one “Doctor Fian, a notable Sorcerer.” Doctor Fian was also known as Iohn 

(John) Cunningham and acted as a “Regester” to the devil, preaching to other witches and 

doing many vile deeds. 

And so while King James certainly follows the fashion in naming women as the 

principal culprit in this crime due to their inherent weakness and frailty, it is not as 

apparent as in some of the other books discussed in this chapter. 

 

Compendium Maleficarum by Francesco Maria Guazzo [1608] 

 

Very little is known of the Ambrosian monk Francesco Maria Guazzo. Even the 

records of his birth and death have been lost, and it can only be said that he lived from 

around the middle of the sixteenth century to about the middle of the seventeenth century. 

The book was dedicated to the protector of the Order of Saint Ambrose, Lord Orazio 

Maffei, and was written in Milan so: 

“… that men, considering the cunning of witches, might study and live 

piously and devoutly in the Lord. And although it may provoke the 

idle jests of the censorious (for what is more difficult than to satisfy 

every palate?), yet I conceive that it will be of some avail to those who 

would escape the mortal venom of sorcerers.”

82

 

 

 

Guazzo’s book, like many others, is divided into three parts. Books I and II 

describe the powers of the witches and the devil, how they come by these powers, how 

they perform the pacts with the devil, and what evils the witch can cause and how. The 

                                                 

82

Francesco Maria Guazzo, Compendium maleficarum (Milan, 1608), ed. M. Summers, trans. E.A. Ashwin 

(London 1929; New York, 1988), from the dedication of the book. 

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30

third book explains how to treat those who have been bewitched. All of the chapters 

consist of two parts: “Argument” and “Examples.” In his arguments he writes in general 

terms, never referring to the witch as either male or female, no single group is pointed out 

as more numerous, and neither does he have a special chapter, as does the Malleus, that is 

there solely to explain why women are more likely to be witches.

83

  

Guazzo’s acknowledgement of male witches is apparent throughout the book in 

the many Examples he provides to his Arguments.

84

 “…a conjurer in France names Trois 

Eschelles, who in the sight of all and in the presence of Charles IX, called the 

Praiseworthy King, charmed from a certain nobleman standing at a distance from him the 

rings of his necklace, so that they flew one by one into his hand…,” the man was accused 

of and confessed to being in league with the devil.

85

 In Catania lived a man called 

Liodorus, “This man, by the force of his incantations, appeared to change men into brute 

beasts, to effect a metamorphosis of nearly all things into new shapes, and instantly to 

bring to himself objects very far distant from him,” Liodorus was accused but managed to 

escape and was finally killed by the Bishop of Catania who “received a sudden power 

from God and in the midst of the city caused him to be cast in the sight of all into a 

furnace of fire…”

86

 Another case tells of a youth in love with a wealthy maiden who in 

desperation turned to “…a fellow servant from Germany who, as he had heard, had a 

demon always at his service.”

87

 

                                                 

83

 Summers (trans) (1928), Malleus maleficarum, Part I, Question VI, pp. 41-48. 

84

 Some of these examples can be found on the following pages of the Summers edition to the Ashwin 

translation of the Compendium maleficarum: 7, 10, 23, 32, 41, 56, 85, 90-91. This is by no means a 
comprehensive list. 

85

 Summers (ed.) (1929), Compendium maleficarum, Book I, Chapter II, p. 5. 

86

 Ibid. Book I, Chapter II, p. 6. 

87

 Ibid. Book I, Chapter II, p. 18. 

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31

Of the examples of people who had consorted with the devil, transformed into 

animals, flown, participated in Sabbaths, and performed maleficia, among other things, 

there is, at least in the first book, a slight majority of women. Thirty examples depict 

women, and twenty-five tell the stories of male witches. 

Guazzo’s Compendium provides evidence that men and women were viewed as 

equally capable of sealing pacts with the devil and performing maleficia with more than 

just words: the woodcut illustrations.

88

 The Compendium contains twenty-three woodcuts 

depicting witches stepping on the cross in front of the devil, being anointed by the devil, 

offering infants for sacrifice, receiving the devil’s blessing, paying homage to the devil as 

he sits on a throne, listening to the preaching of the devil, causing maleficium by burning 

a village, feasting with demons, riding the devil in the form of an animal through the air, 

performing the Obscene Kiss, dancing with demons, exhuming bodies and cutting up 

children, and cooking infants in preparation for the feast. All illustrations have both male 

and female witches, sometimes more women, but interestingly enough, most illustrations 

feature more men. About sixty percent of the figures in the illustrations, with the 

exception of demons or victims, are male.

89

 

 

Conclusions 

All witchcraft theorists of the early modern period held to the view that witchcraft 

was a predominantly female activity. It is almost a mantra in almost every work: women 

                                                 

88

 These appear in the Summers (1988) edition on pages: 14, 15, 16, 17, 20, 22, 23, 33, 34, 35, 36

*

, 37, 38

*

39, 51, 83, 84

*

, 89(2), 90

*

, 92

*

, 95

*

, 96

*

, 98

*

, 105, 129.

*

 (Pages marked with 

*

 have illustrations that 

appeared in previous pages). See Appendix B for examples. 

89

 Some of the figures in the illustrations have only their head visible and so it is hard to distinguish at times 

men from women, but it is clear to see that by looking through them that there are a bit more men than 
women present. 

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32

are weak, prone to witchcraft, and more likely to practice it than men. And yet, all these 

authors give us abundant examples and descriptions, sometimes almost in the same 

breath, of male witches.  

Of all the texts presented here, only the Malleus maleficarum attributed certain 

crimes to men alone: “Of Three Ways in which Men and not Women may be Discovered 

to be Addicted to Witchcraft.”

90

 The Malleus also tries to blame some women, due to 

their role as midwives, for the killing of unborn babies and offering newborns to the 

devil. While the authors claim that “this form of homicide is associated rather with 

women than with men,”

91

 they later in the book cite the example of male witches causing 

miscarriages and abortions.

92

 In no other text is one group blamed solely for a certain 

kind of witchcraft. Guazzo’s Compendium is full of examples of every kind of 

maleficium and diabolical witchcraft describing both male and female witches. 

If we look at the use of the grammatical form used to describe a witch throughout 

the works of the early modern demonologists, we find that these demonologists had no 

qualms about using the masculine form. Book V of Nider’s Formicarius uses the male 

form seventy-eight percent of the time; the Malleus maleficarum does so about thirty 

percent; Bodin’s De la demonomanie des sorciers uses the masculine form 820 times and 

the feminine form 399.

93

 A quick calculation using the numbers given by Apps and Gow 

show that about forty-nine percent of the references to witches in the demonological 

tracts use the masculine form. Interestingly enough, it is in the works of the skeptics that 

                                                 

90

 Summers (trans) (1928), Malleus maleficarum Part II, Question I, Chapter XVI, pp. 150. 

91

 Ibid. Part I, Question XII, Chapter XI, p. 66. 

92

 Ibid. Part II, Question I, Chapter VII, p. 118. 

93

 Apps and Gow (2003), pp. 100-108 and Table 2, p. 104. 

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33

we see the most references to women as witches, though that could simply be the reaction 

to what they saw in the courts, and from their readings of the witchcraft tracts. 

The significance of these two points is central to the realization that while the 

intellectuals of early modern Europe did indeed see women as the main culprits of the 

European witch hunt, they at no time claimed that witchcraft was a sex-specific crime. 

Their insistence that the great majority of witches were female is not always supported by 

their own words, their own examples, and their own grammatical use of male and female 

terms. These texts support a slight female majority, not an overwhelming one  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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34

 
3. Cases of Male witches 

 

 

That women dominated the courts of law of early modern Europe as the accused 

in witchcraft cases is unquestionable. This has been established since the earliest 

scholarly works concerning the European Witch-Hunt at the beginning of the twentieth 

century, and from it derived the many works trying to explain why this was so and who 

the typical witch was. 

 

So much work had gone into this subject, yet only a small portion has been 

concerned with the male witches. Cynically it may be said that many of these works were 

sexist, even if some of their authors were so unconsciously.  

 

We already now that male witches constituted about twenty-five percent of the 

witches prosecuted in Europe during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This may be 

deduced from surviving court records, pamphlets, and the examples mentioned in the 

writings of contemporary writers, whether they be condemning or advocating the idea of 

witchcraft and the prosecution of so-called witches. But whenever a discussion arises as 

to which kind of person would most likely be prosecuted and executed, the descriptions 

are of women. Before we can describe the male witch, it is important to be familiar with 

several cases in which men play a main role. 

 

The Witches from Normandy [France, 1564-1660] 

 

Currently 381 cases of witchcraft prosecution are known to us from the 

Parlement of Rouen, of those, 278 are the cases of male witches.

94

 The stream of 

                                                 

94

 Apps and Gow (2003), Table 1, p. 45. 

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35

witchcraft cases and executions was steady in Normandy, with the records showing no 

real witch-hunting panic,

95

 thought the number of executions was relatively high 

compared to that in other French provinces.

96

 

 

Shepherds were the singled out for accusations of witchcraft in Normandy, as 

they would use spells to keep their herd safe from predators and illness. Charges of being 

able to cure, or as is the case of a fifty-year-old shepherd, refusing to cure someone,

97

 

and poisoning using toads’ venom were also part of the accusations for which the 

Norman witches were prosecuted. The youngest defendant was a teenager accused of 

using the Eucharist to cast a spell,

98

 and the oldest was a man of sixty-six who was 

“caught with a dangerous-looking box holding some toads and mysterious powders.”

99

 

But it appears as if most witches were between the ages of thirty-five and fifty. 

 

The majority of accused male witches in Normandy were shepherds, followed by 

clergymen who constituted about ten percent of those executed, and then blacksmiths.

100

 

The priests may have been accused of having found lost objects and sorcery, and the 

blacksmiths were usually accused of bewitching horses. 

 

The Examination of John Walsh (England, 1566)

101

 

 

On August 20, 1566, John Walsh, from Netherberry parish in Dosetshere, was 

brought to examination in front of witnesses in the house of Sheriff Mayster Thomas 

Sinkeler, to answer an accusation of witchcraft. 
                                                 

95

 Monter, W., ‘Toads and Eucharists: The Male Witches of Normandy, 1564-1660,’ French Historical 

Studies, 20:4 (1997), p. 567. 

96

 Ibid. p. 572. 

97

 Ibid. p. 375. 

98

 Ibid. p. 586, and another case of shepherds using the Eucharist for spell on p. 591. 

99

 Ibid. p. 578. 

100

 Ibid. pp. 583-584. 

101

 M. Gibson, Early Modern Witches (London and New York, 2000), pp. 25-32. 

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John Walsh was a physician and a surgeon, a ‘healer’; he learned this ‘art’ from 

the priest Robert of Drayton, a Catholic, a “papist”. It seems as if that fact alone would 

have been enough for the author of the pamphlet to accuse John Walsh of witchcraft, as 

the first two pages of the pamphlet recounts the tale of several Popes who had colluded 

with the Devil, demons, and familiars, some as sorcerers and necromancers. Sorcery and 

witchcraft, according to the pamphleteer, were deeply rooted in the Roman Church: 

“These with a great many mor of that abhominable sea of 

Rome wer thus occupied, whose endes were most terrible, 

as their lives were most wicked. And these faculties their 

inferior sorte, as Moonkes, Friers, and Priestes also used, 

and would teach the same witchcrafts and Sorceries to such 

men and women as they had committed evyll with.”

102

 

 

 

But while the questions of his interrogators had nothing to do with the warring 

factions of Christianity, the animosity is ever present, and crops up from time to time 

during the transcribing of the pamphlet by its author. 

 

Walsh was not a scientifically-trained man. When asked how he practiced his 

‘art,’ knowing what medicine to use, he responded that “hee useth hys Phisicke or 

Surgerie by Arte, naturallye practiced by him” and “not by anye other yll or secret 

meanes.”

103

 When they ask him about the heat and cold of the body, as derived from the 

humours theory, he does not know what they are speaking of. The humours theory, an 

                                                 

102

 Ibid. p. 28. 

103

 Ibid. p. 29. 

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integral aspect of medical studies since the Middle Ages, was unknown to this simple 

‘healer.’ His knowledge, it was obvious to his questioners, came from magic. 

 

Magic, of course, brings with it other concerns. Walsh had a deep belief in 

fairies, claiming there were three kinds, “white, greene, & black”

104

 and that he spoke 

with them in the special places where these spirits congregate. From then on, John Walsh 

speaks of another kind of spirit, the witch’s familiar. Like the witches’ Sabbath on the 

continent, an element largely absent from the English cases, the familiar had a central 

role in many English witch trials. Walsh tells his interrogators that he “had a booke of 

hys said maister, which had great circles in it, werein he would set two waxe candles a 

cross of virgin waxe, to raise the Familiar spirite,” and that “his Familiar would somtyme 

come unto hym lyke a gray blacksih Culver, and sometime lyke a brended Dog, and 

sometimes lyke a man in all proportions, saving that he had cloven feete.”

105

 But unlike 

some other witches accused and interrogated, Walsh used his connection with the spirit 

familiar “to search for things theft stolen, & for no other purpose at al.”

106

 Still, payment 

had to be made either by feeding the familiar,

107

 or by giving it some of ones own blood. 

 

Walsh adamantly protested that he had never tried to hurt anyone, for he knew 

that “he that doth hurt, can never heal again any man, nor can at any time do good,”

108

 

though he admitted knowing that some witches do use their powers to hurt people and 

cattle. 

                                                 

104

 Idem. 

105

 Ibid. pp. 29-30. 

106

 Ibid. p. 30. 

107

 The accused witches who had a familiar doing their bidding would often say that they had to give it 

some form of food in return for the service it provided. This food could be a chicken, a cat, milk, etc., in 
many cases the accused also had to give a drop of his or her own blood along with the food. 

108

 Gibson (2000), p.30. 

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John Walsh was a cunning man. His medical knowledge was not formal, but it 

had been acquired from his master, the priest Robert of Drayton, and probably from 

common cures practiced among the peasants. It’s quite possible that he too was a 

Catholic, a papist like his master, a fact that may have instigated some of those who 

came to him for cures and help in finding lost or stolen items to accuse him of witchcraft 

or sorcery. For while it may not have seemed suspicious for some cunning man or 

woman to say a prayer to help in the cure or recovery of an item, the formulation of the 

prayer in an unfamiliar way might arouse suspicion and fear, however.  

 

The Witches from Trier [Germany, 1581-1593] 

 

Sixteenth-century Europe had many witch scares, precipitating many accusations 

and trials, some of which spiraled almost out of control. The witch hunt in the German 

electorate of Trier, a territorial state ruled by a prince-archbishop, lasted for almost 

twelve years. Torture was used extensively, and the accused were forced to name 

accomplices, keeping hysteria high with ever more accused: “Scarcely any of those who 

were accused escaped punishment.”

109

  And as more people were named, people of high 

status were implicated: “the judge, with two Burgomasters, several councilors and 

Associate Judges, canons of sundry collegiate churches, parish-priests, rural dean, were 

swept away in this ruin.”

110

 Two such were Dr. Dietrich Flade, tried and executed in 

1589, and Niclas Fiedler, whose trial and execution happened two years later in 1591. 

                                                 

109

 Kros and Peters, (2001

2

) p. 314. 

110

 Idem. 

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Dr. Dietrich Flade was senior judge of the civil court at Trier, vice-governor of 

the city, and rector of the university. Dr. Flade holds the dubious honor of being the 

highest-ranking person to be tried for witchcraft in Europe. 

One of the first to accuse him was a Matthias, a young boy who was “led by 

others into witchcraft, was accused thereof by other executed persons, and was alleged 

also to have been present at the witch-sabbath.”

111

 The boy apparently recognized him as 

one of the leading figures in the Sabbath. At first this accusation were not taken 

seriously, and Dr, Flade’s high social rank afforded him some protection, but: 

 “…afterward the scandal grew ever greater, and the 

accusations of the witches, both old and young, men and 

women, became so frequent that we were led to have the 

trials, in so far as they related to him, excerpted, and find 

out that twenty-three executed men and women have 

confessed against him…”

112

 

 

 

The accusations, it is said, came from several cities and some of the confessants 

were respectable people, at least before they were accused of witchcraft. Dr. Flade, as we 

have seen, was a well known figure in Trier, and as judge was undoubtedly a target for 

the spite of the accused and convicted, as this could easily be an example of a retaliation 

of people who were low on the social ladder attacking those in positions of authority.

113

 

While this might have been the case in several instances, Dr. Flade’s case was different. 

It was only after several years of presiding over the court and torture chamber that he 

                                                 

111

 Ibid. p. 312. 

112

 Ibid. p. 313. 

113

 M.Gaskill, Crime and Mentalities in Early Modern England (Cambridge, 2000), pp. 55-57. 

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started to have doubts about the validity of the accusations and the confessions which 

were elicited under torture. His arranged fall came shortly after.

114

  

 

Flade, it should be noted, did not just sit idle when he was accused. He tried to 

run, but was soon captured. Flade petitioned to be let into the monastic life in exchange 

for all of his property, but the petition was denied and in August of 1589 his trial began. 

By September, Flade has confessed, under torture, to the charges and was sentenced to 

death.  

The account of his execution was befitting a person of such his status. He went 

by foot to his place of execution, even though he was old and worn out by the ordeal and 

tortures and “the whole city, stirred by the novel sight, followed him.” Upon reaching the 

stake we are told that Flade turned to the throng that came to see his execution and 

beseeched them to learn from his mistake and shun the deceits of Satan. After all, a man 

of such social status could not be dragged to the stake and die screaming and cursing. 

The former mayor of the city of Trier was executed on the October 1, 1591. 

Niclas Fiedler, as were all who were accused of witchcraft and devil worshipping during 

the Trier witch-hunt, confessed only under torture. Upon returning to the court and being 

asked to repeat his confession from the torture chamber, as was the practice in such 

cases, he:  

“…began to say he was an unfortunate man and that only 

under pain had he confessed things that were not true. If he 

admitted this, then he would damn his soul, because he 

                                                 

114

 W. Monter, ‘Witch Trials in Continental Europe 1560-1660’ in Ankraloo and Clark (eds.) Witchcraft 

and Magic in Europe: the Period of the Witch Trials (Philadelphia, 2002) p. 24. 

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would thereby do wrong to himself and other men. He had 

nothing to do with these things.”

115

 

 

 

This kind of denial was common in many cases in which torture was used. 

Fiedler was carried back to the torture chamber, bound and beaten. Fiedler again started 

confessing about having been lured by the devil and flying to Franzenknüppchen where 

he joined in  feasting and dancing, naming accomplices and planning to destroy wine and 

corn. His torture was so severe that the \mayor, a Dr. Hulzbach, who was outside of the 

chamber ordered it to stop. Fiedler was released and was asked again to confess, but with 

the threat of the torturer still hanging above him, he recounted again the same 

confession, adding more elaboration and even named Flade and placed him in the 

Sabbath. 

 

News from Scotland [Scotland, 1591] 

 

While four witches ‘star’ in this pamphlet, the main protagonist is John (Iohn) 

Cunningham also known as Dr. Fian, a master of the School at Saltpans in Lowthian. 

Even though his story is the last one recounted in the pamphlet, his name figures 

prominently on the title page of the pamphlet. 

 

Dr. Fian’s name came up at the interrogation of the first witch in the pamphlet, 

one Geillis Duncane, who claimed that he was the only man who “suffered to come to 

the Diuels readinges.”

116

 The doctor was subsequently taken to prison and placed under 

                                                 

115

 B.P. Levack (ed.), The Witchcraft Sourcebook (London and New York, 2004), p. 176. 

116

 James VI and I (1966), News from Scotland, p. 18. 

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torture to which he resisted due to some “charmed Pinnes.”

117

 Upon the removal of the 

‘Pinnes’ he started confessing to both being a “Clarke to all those that were in subiection 

to the Diuels seruice,”

118

 as well as to bewitching a man who was enamored with a 

woman in whom Dr. Fian was interested to fall into lunacy and madness. Also he 

confessed to trying to cast a love spell on the object of his affection, he insisted that it 

had not worked. 

 

After confessing, Dr. Fian “renounced the deuvill and all his wicked workes, 

vowed to leade the life of a Christian.”

119

 Several days later he escaped the prison where 

he was held and hunted down again. Upon being captured he recanted his confessions 

and was put to extreme torture. But Dr. Fian, according to the pamphlet, did not break 

again. At last he was executed and his body thrown into a great fire that at the end of 

January 1591. 

 

Dr. Fian was treated, according to the pamphlet, much more harshly than the 

other witches, and that, even though one of these witches, Agnis Tompson, had 

confessed to trying to use witchcraft to kill King James VI of Scotland. By the time that 

this pamphlet was printed they were still in prison.  

 

The Witches of Northamptonshire [England, 1612] 

 

This pamphlet recounts the arraignments and executions of five witches: Agnes 

Brown and her daughter Joane Vaughan, Hellen Jenkenson, Mary Barber, and Arthur 

Bill. All were executed on July 22. 

 Arthur 

Bill 

was doomed from the first paragraph: 

                                                 

117

 Ibid. p. 19. 

118

 Idem. 

119

 Ibid. p. 25. 

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“This Arthur Bill, a wetched poore Man, both in state and 

mind, remained in a towne called Raunds, in the County 

aforesaid, begotten and borne of parents that were both 

Witches, and he (like a gratious Child) would not 

degenerate, nor suffer himself to stray from his fathers 

wicked Counsels, but carefully trode the steps that hee had 

divillishly taught him.”

120

 

 

 

When he was accused of bewitching to death one Martha Aspine, Arthur Bill was 

already infamous for leading an “evill life,”

121

 and had already been accused of 

bewitching all sorts of livestock. His father and mother, it is noted, were also known for 

their ill reputation, though Martha’s murder was not leveled against them. To affirm their 

suspicions, the Justices ordered the Bill family to trial by water to all and “caused them 

all to bee bound, and their Thumbes and great Toes to bee tied acrosse, and so threw the 

father, mother and sonne, and none of them sunke, but all floated upon the water.”

122

 

 

The trial by water was enough for the Justices and Arthur, as the main culprit, 

was sent to the Northampton gaol. His father testified against him, so Arthur and his 

mother bewitched his father, rendering him mute. But the spell would not hold, and the 

father became a principal witness. The mother succumbed to fear of execution and killed 

herself. Arthur himself would maintain him innocence to the bitter end:  

“He being brought to the place of Execution, and standing 

upon that fatall stage for offenders, pleaded still his 

                                                 

120

 Gibson (2000), p. 166. 

121

 Idem. 

122

 Ibid. p. 167. 

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innocencie, that Authority was turned into Tyranny, and 

Justice into extreame Injury.”

123

 

 

 

While perhaps the most eloquent of the five witches described in the pamphlet, 

they all pleaded ‘not guilty’ and maintained innocence till the moment of their execution.  

 

 Even though claiming innocence, Arthur at one point confessed that he had 

command over three Spirits whom “would doe any mischiefe to any man, woman, or 

child that hee would appointe.”

124

 The pamphlet states that Arthur was unaware of 

having given the said confession, so while it may be that he truly believed he had 

familiar spirits, it might easily be a jest on his part or he might have been trying to scare 

or threaten someone. 

 

From the outset, Arthur was a troublesome youth. The fact that both his parents 

were suspected witches certainly did not help. Just as is the case with female witches 

who were sometimes known for their sharp tongues and bad manners, at least according 

to the accusers, this might easily have been the case of Arthur Bill of the town of 

Raunds. 

 

Johannes Junius, Burgomaster of Bamberg [Germany, 1628] 

 

Over 630 people were accused of witchcraft and many of them were executed 

between 1626 and 1630 in the city of Bamberg, Germany. Torture was routinely used, 

and pressured to name more and more accomplices, the accused were left with little 

                                                 

123

 Ibid. p. 170. 

124

 Ibid. p. 168. 

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choice. As is also the case with most such trials involving a great number of people and 

torture, the stereotypical image of the witch slowly fell apart.  

 

After several days of interrogation without torture, in which Junius confessed 

nothing and denied all accusations brought against him, even from other ‘witnesses,’ he 

was “put to the torture.”

125

 Moving from Thumb screws, to Leg-screws, and finally 

Strappado, Junius maintained his innocence through them all. Finally, “On July 5, the 

above named Junius is without torture, but with urgent persuasions, exhorted to 

confess.”

126

 He confessed to having been seduced by the devil, of having a “paramour he 

had to call Vixen,”

127

 and of going to witches’ meetings.  

While it is possible to see the effect of the torture in forcing Junius’s confession, 

it is better revealed in the letter to his daughter that he managed to write, and secretly 

send. Shortly after greeting her he exclaims:  

“Innocent I came to jail, innocent I was tortured, innocent I 

must die. For whoever comes to the house, either must 

become a witch or be tortured for so long that he claims 

something pulled from his imagination, and, God have 

mercy, figure out something to say.”

128

 

 

 

As the trial record says, Junius suffered and maintained his innocence throughout 

the first session of torture. The witnesses brought by the interrogators also would call 

upon him to say something, begging his forgiveness as they were forced to say the evil 

                                                 

125

 Levack (2004), p. 199 

126

 Idem. 

127

 Idem. 

128

 Apps and Gow (2000), p. 159 

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things against him, just as he would be forced.

129

 But Junius would strive to keep his 

innocence, even debating with his torturer claiming that “so long as things go this way, 

no honest man in Bamberg will be safe, you no more than I or anyone else.”

130

  

 

Junius maintained his innocence until June 30. As the executioner took him back 

to jail, he begged him to confess something: “Sir, I beg you, for God’s sake confess 

something, whether it be true or false. Invent something,” the executioner implored, 

concluding that “one torture will follow another until you say you are a witch.”

131

 

Hearing these words Junius asked for some time to recollect his thought and to see a 

priest. He was given the time, but not the priest. “And then my statement,” he writes to 

his daughter, “as follows, is entirely made up.”

132

 

 

It should be noted that all the witnesses brought against Johannes Junius, as well 

as many other city chancellors and five other Burgomasters were executed for 

witchcraft.

133

 Most of Junius’s witnesses were men; all of them, men and women, were 

of a high social rank. 

 

The Witch-Trial at Lukh [Russia, 1657]

134

 

 

 Some of the townsmen of Lukh, a provincial town northeast of Moscow, 

submitted a petition to their governor complaining that their wives have been bewitched 

and accusing seven people, six men and one woman, the wife of one of the petitioners. 

                                                 

129

 Ibid. p. 160. 

130

 Ibid. p. 161. 

131

 Idem. 

132

 Ibid. p. 162. 

133

 Ibid. pp. 160, 165 (note 1). 

134

 Levack (2004), pp. 214-219. 

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A special investigator was sent. The investigator first interviewed the 

townspeople and then the bewitched. The bewitched women, who went into fits and 

made bestial cries, did not seem to remember that in their fits they called out the names 

of those who had apparently bewitched them. At that point the investigator turned on the 

accused, writing thus:  

“So I, your slave, tortured Ignashka Salautin and his 

comrades without mercy, and after three round of torture 

he, Ignashka, still said nothing to incriminate himself or the 

others. But with torture, his comrades Tereshka Malakurov 

and Ianka Salautin and the monastic peasant Arkhipko 

Fadeev admitted to that criminal witchcraft.”

135

 

 

 

 Tereshka Malakurov confessed at first to knowing words that “eased hernias and 

quieted blood-flow,”

136

 and that he had learned them from a horse healer, but that he did 

not know how to heal the sick or bewitch. Under torture Tereshka confessed to trying to 

heal some people for money, and that he had been “bewitching people with criminal 

witchcraft”

137

 for more than three years. He also taught his wife how to bewitch, 

something she confirmed upon her torture in addition to the admission that she herself  

had bewitched some people. 

The monastic peasant Arkhipko Fadeev also confessed, under torture, of healing 

“little children of hernias and blood-flow and he fended off evil magic at weddings and 

                                                 

135

 Ibid. p. 21.6 

136

 Idem. 

137

 Ibid. p. 217. 

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cured two townsmen of impotence.”

138

 More torture brought more confessions, 

especially those of ill magic causing “chills and racking pain and crying out.”

139

 His 

wife, after torture, incriminated him as well. 

Ianka Salautin too confessed, after torture, to bewitching some of the people of 

Lukh, and of learning these spells from Arkhipko Fadeev. 

The investigator concluded that Tereshka and Olenka Malakurvo, Ianka Salautin, 

and Arkhipka Fadeev were all guilty of witchcraft. The three men were beheaded, and 

Olenka, Tereshka’s wife, was “buried in the earth.”

140

 

 

A True Relation of the Arraignment of Eighteen Witches [England, 1645] 

 This 

pamphlet 

recounts 

a session held at St. Edmundsbury in Suffolk. Of the 

eighteen witches hanged, two were men: John Lowes, the Vicar of Brandeston, and 

Thomas Evard, a cooper. 

 

The pamphlet is short and while the title pages gives the names of all the witches 

hanged , only three are named in the body of the pamphlet itself: John Lowes, Thomas 

Evard, and his wife Mary. The rest either remain anonymous, or are not mentioned at all. 

It appears that the anonymous author of this pamphlet thought it important to mention 

only those witches he considered important: the vicar and the cooper. 

 

The vicar, John Lowes, had raised tempests on the sea to cast away ships and 

endanger their passengers, and with the help of six imps committed many heinous and 

wicked acts. One of the most serious allegations against the Vicar was the fact that while 

under the influence of the devil, he had preached sermons. 

                                                 

138

 Idem. 

139

 Ibid. p. 218. 

140

 Ibid. p. 219. 

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The cooper Thomas Evard and his wife, having access, by way of his profession 

to barrels and casks: “freely confeffed that they had bewitched Beere in the 

Brewhoufe,”

141

 as well as to having an imp as a familiar. 

 

Witches of Finland 

 

Martin Studius was a professor of Greek and Hebrew in the Turku Academy, 

when in 1644 he was accused of teaching diabolical acts to students and forced into 

exile. In 1661  Henricus Eolenius was suspected of being a student of Stodius and for 

practicing diabolical acts, mainly because of how quickly he had learned Arabic and 

Syrian. For this he was expelled from the Academy. Yet another student, Isacus 

Gunnerus, the son of a vicar, was suspected of committing diabolical acts and because he 

was Stodius’s pupil, he too was expelled. The Turku Academy had to maintain its 

reputation.

142

  

 

The majority of the cases brought before the courts in Finland were for traditional 

magic dealing with cattle, foodstuff, and health. Diabolism was a rare charge, but once it 

appeared it was targeted mostly at women. It was professional sorcerers, or those who 

had that reputation, who were usually targeted.

143

 

 

Cases from Iceland 

 

 The basics of Icelandic witchcraft were ‘Words’ and ‘Knowledge.’ With these 

prerequisites, anyone could learn to cast spells, but that knowledge was hard to acquire,. 

                                                 

141

 Sharpe (2003), vol. 3, p. 51. 

142

 A. Heikkinen and T. Kervvinen, ‘Finland: The Male Domination’ in Ankarloo and Henningsen (eds.) 

Early Modern European Witchcraft, centers and peripheries (Oxford, 1990), pp. 326-327. 

143

 Ibid. pp. 322-324. 

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For that reason poets could be extremely powerful, as in the case of Jón the Learned who 

averted a ‘Turkish’ slave-raider ship by reciting a powerful poem. Jón was later accused 

of witchcraft but managed to escape the stake. Jón Rögnvaldsson, however, was not so 

fortunate. He was accused of raising a ghost  to kill a horse and attack a boy; he also had 

in his house a sheet of runes. His brother defended him, saying that even though his 

brother did practice magic, he didn’t do it deliberately, and he was too weak willed.

144

 

Jón was burned at the stake anyway.  

 

Another case tells the story of síra Jón Magnússon who after experiencing some 

strange incidents in his house and feeling ill, decided that the cause of his afflictions 

were two parishioners, a father and a son, and brought charges against them. After an 

investigation they were found guilty of dealing with the devil, possessing books of black 

art, and of using magic to harm cattle and bewitch girls. Although they were both 

burned,  síra  Jón was convinced that someone else was haunting him now: Þuriður 

Jónsdóttir, the daughter and sister to the executed witches. Þuriður managed to gather 

twelve lay men who would testify to her innocence, an Icelandic legal institution, and the 

charges were dropped. Þuriður’s family even successfully sued síra Jón for damages.

145

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                 

144

 K.Hastrup, ‘Iceland: Sorcerers and Paganism’ in Ankarloo and Henningsen (eds.) Early Modern 

European Witchcraft: Centers and Peripheries (Oxford, 1990), pp. 392-393. 

145

 Ibid., pp. 394-396 

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51

4. The Male Witch 

 

 

The following chapter will discuss the dispersion of male witches over Europe, 

what men were accused of witchcraft, what charges were leveled against them, and how 

different they were from female witches. 

 

Male witches in Europe 

In view of the fact that the male witches did not fit the stereotype, it is impossible 

to describe the typical male witch. While it might be easier to do so in a regional study, in  

all of Europe, the stereotype breaks down. In no single place were there equal numbers of 

male and female witches, and throughout Europe the percentage of male witches could 

range from five to ninety-two percent, as shown in the following table. 

The table provides a sample of the spread of male witches, it examines a number 

of towns, provinces, and countries, and has a time ranges from fifty to 250 years. And 

yet, as partial as it is, it still gives us a good idea of where the male witches were. 

England, Scotland, and Germany had of the fewest male witches. It explains why the 

Kentish gentleman Scot, for example, usually describes witches as females. 

 

Upon further examination we see that Finland has an almost equal number of 

male and female witches, while Estonia, Russia, and Iceland have a majority of male 

witches. The small number of cases in these ‘peripheral’ places may help tilt the scale ‘in 

favor’ of the female witches, and might cause some to think that male witches were a 

majority only in the peripheries. The French provinces of Burgundy and Normandy upset 

this view with their prevalence of male witches.  

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52

Witchcraft Prosecutions by Sex

146

 

Place Dates 

Female 

Male 

Male 

Bishopric of Basel 

1571-1670 

181 

Hungary 1520-1777 

1,482 

160 

10 

Essex Co., England 

1560-1602 

158 

24 

13 

SW Germany (executions) 

pre 1628 

580 

88 

13 

New England 

1620-1725 

89 

14 

14 

Scotland 1560-1709 

2,208 

413 

16 

Norway 

1551-1760 

c. 690 

c. 173 

20 

SW Germany (executions) 

post 1627 

470 

150 

24 

Geneva 1537-1662 

240 

74 

24 

Venice 1550-1650 

714 

224 

24 

S. Sweden 

1635-1754 

77 

25 

25 

Castile  

1540-1685 

324 

132 

29 

Fribourg 1607-1683 

103 

59 

36 

Zeeland 1450-1729 

19 

11 

37 

Pays de Vaud 

1539-1670 

62 

45 

42 

Aragon 1600-1650 

90 

69 

43 

Finland 1520-1699 

325 

316 

49 

Burgundy 1580-1642 

76 

83 

52 

Estonia 1520-1729 

77 

116 

60 

Russia (appeals) 

1622-1700 

40 

59 

60 

Normandy 1564-1660 

103 

278 

73 

Iceland 1625-1685 

10 

110 

92 

 

When trying to understand who the male witches of Europe were, we cannot 

ignore Iceland and Russia any more than we can ignore some of the French provinces. 

We have to review as many cases as possible, as has been done in the studies of female 

witches, if we want to arrive at any sort of conclusion about the male witch of Europe. 

 

Germany 

 

Germany has the dubious honor of having executed the most witches. In a recent 

recalculation of the number of witches executed in the Holy Roman Empire of the 

German Nations, between 1560 and 1660 an estimated 25,000 to 30,000 witches were 

                                                 

146

 Details taken from: Apps and Gow (2003), p. 45, also see note 2, pp. 60-61; and Levack (1987), p. 124, 

also see note 14, p. 143. 

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executed. “Three of every four witches executed in Europe between 1560 and 1660,” 

writes Monter, “spoke some dialect of German.”

147

 The high number of executions may 

be attributed to the lack of a central authority and the loose control the government had 

in the areas of intense witch-hunting; the large and better governed states and 

principalities rarely experienced witch trials.

148

 

 

In his extensive study of witch-hunting in southwestern Germany, Midelfort 

concludes that the longer a witch-hunt lasted in a certain area, and the larger it became, 

the greater the likelihood that the stereotype of the old-living-alone-women-witch would 

break down.

149

 It is also worth remembering what a skeptical contemporary, a professor 

of theology at Trier by the name of Cornelius Loos, wrote about the witchcraft 

prosecutions that engulfed Trier: “This movement was promoted by many in office, who 

hoped wealth from the persecution.”

150

 

The collapse of the stereotype can be seen in the example of the witch-hunt in 

Trier. While the trial of Dr. Flade may well have been arranged by his enemies and those 

who wanted to continue the witch-hunts in the area, the fact that a person of such high 

stature would be prosecuted

151

 and condemned by the courts indicates that this hunt, 

which had been going on for eight years began to fall apart in the way that Midelfort 

described. The accusation of Fiedler, the former mayor of Trier ten years into the hunt 

confirms this even further.  

                                                 

147

 Monter (2002), pp. 12-16; quote from page 16. 

148

 Ibid. p. 17. 

149

 H.C.E. Midelfort, Witch Hunting in Southwestern Germany 1562-1684: The Social and Intellectual 

Foundations (Stanford, 1972), p.194. 

150

 Kros and Peters (2001

2

), p. 314. 

151

 Judges of witches were many times seen as above the temptation of the devil. 

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54

Few men were prosecuted and executed in Germany for witchcraft, but with the 

high number of executions in the Holy Roman Empire, even these few are a large 

number compared to other regions in Europe. 

 

France 

 

France was one of the most populous states in early modern Europe. France also 

had an impressive centralized court system and an appellate system that only required 

defendants to ask for appeal from the parlement, with no extra cost or danger of fines.  

And also, as we have seen in Normandy, France had many accused and executed 

male witches. Of the 1300 prosecuted by the Parlement of Paris after 1565, more than 

half were men; a sample from the Parlement of Burgundy between 1580-1642 give us 

eighty-three male witches out of 159.

152

 About half of the people executed for witchcraft 

in France were men. 

 

Normandy gives us a good telling of how it was generally in France, the two 

groups that were most often accused of witchcraft were shepherds and clerics. While in 

Normandy the shepherds made up more than half of the accused, at Rouen and Paris both 

groups accounted for about half of those executed.

153

 The priests would usually be 

condemned for practicing black magic, sacrilegious magic, and witchcraft; the shepherds 

were accused of practicing magic to protect their herd or harm someone else’s, and they 

would usually do that with stolen Eucharists or toads’ venom. 

 

 

                                                 

152

 Monter (1997), p. 564; see also note 1 on same page. 

153

 Monter (2002), p. 42. 

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55

England 

 

Two facts distinguished English witch trials from those on the Continent. The 

first one is the rarity of the references to the witches’ Sabbath, meaning that most cases 

dealt with maleficium. The second fact is the prohibition of the use of torture; only 

Mathew Hopkins, the self-proclaimed ‘witch-finder general’ came close to inflicting 

torture with his aggressive interrogation methods between 1645 and 1647. Due to 

Hopkins’ interrogations some people confessed to having made a devil’s pact and to 

having sexual intercourse with demons, instigating a panic that swept up about 250 

people.

154

 

 

That the Sabbath did not strike deeps root in England, and that torture was not 

used to extort confessions does not mean England was immune to continental ideas of 

witchcraft. In England, just like in the rest of Europe, women were the prime suspects in 

witchcraft and comprised about ninety percent of the accused. In his study of the Essex 

witchcraft cases, McFarlane notes a large number of men accused of witchcraft; eleven 

out of twenty-three “were either married to an accused witch or appeared in a joint 

indictment with a woman.”

155

 But as Apps and Gow have observed, this statement 

“assumes that the women involved in the eleven cases were accused first and were the 

cause of the accusation against the men.”

156

 Two cases can illustrate the above statement. 

William and Margery Skelton were accused of murder by witchcraft, neither of them had 

been previously indicted. John Samond had been accused several times of witchcraft but 

                                                 

154

 B. Ankarloo,  ‘Witch Trials in Northern Europe 1450-1700’ in Ankraloo and Clark (eds.) Witchcraft and 

Magic in Europe: the Period of the Witch Trials ((Philadelphia, 2002), p. 79. 

155

 A. McFarlane, Witchcraft in Tudor and Stuart England, a regional and Comparative Study (London, 

1970), p. 160. 

156

 Apps and Gow (2003), p. 48. 

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was always acquitted, until 1572 when he was accused again but this time with his wife, 

Joan, who had no prior record.

157

  

 

Russia 

 

The oldest Russian reference to witch hunting describes how several elderly 

people were executed in Suzdal after having been blamed for the food shortage which 

was the result of a serious drought in 1024.

158

 In 1227 in Novgorod, four male witches 

were burned for sorcery.

159

 During the 16

th

 century, the Russian political elite were 

preoccupied with the power of witchcraft and sorcery, whether to hurt a person or cause 

calamities.

160

 Most Russian witches were accused of porcha, a Russian term for damage 

and injury, devil worshiping or Sabbaths do not appear in the Russian cases. 

 

Most of the accused in Russia were male peasants, the rest were spread out along 

the socioeconomic spectrum from a former military governor, to a priest, to tavern-

keepers, to foreigners.

161

  

 

Finland 

 

In Finland, accusation of and executions for witchcraft were divided almost 

equally between men and women. Contrary to Midelfort’s account of what transpired in 

southwestern Germany

162

 as the trials in Finland reached a peak and the stereotype of the 

witch broke down it was women who were accused more, raising to as high as fifty-nine 

                                                 

157

 Ibid. pp. 48-52. 

158

 Zguta, R., ‘Witchcraft Trials in Seventeenth-Century Russia,’ The American Historical Review, 82:5 

(1977), pp. 1188-89. 

159

 Ibid. p. 1190. 

160

 Ibid. pp. 1192-1193. 

161

 Ibid. p. 1197. 

162

 Midelfort (1972). 

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57

percent women in the 1670s. This rise can be linked to the Swedish origin of the 

population in the areas of the intense witch hunting, who brought their demonlogical 

ideas with them.

163

 Once the peak passed, and life returned to ‘normal,’ men were once 

again the central defendants in the witch trials.

164

 In Finland as in Iceland, magic, 

whether for good or evil, was mainly in the hands of men. 

 

Iceland 

 

In Iceland is an anomaly in the history of European witchcraft. From 1604 to 

1720, records of 120 trials survive; only ten of the defendants are women. Twenty-two 

people were found guilty and executed, only one of whom was a woman. It should be 

noted that cases in Iceland revolved around maleficium, the devil played only a 

secondary part, mostly instigated by questions from the judge, and the Sabbath was 

entirely missing.

165

 

Knowledge is an important factor in Icelandic magic: from how to write special 

magical runes to the collection of the ‘Black Books’ which were used to learn and teach 

magic, to oral tradition passed on from father to son.

166

 Knowledge and wisdom were 

associated with men in Iceland, and all the terms describing a typical witch, magician, or 

sorcerer, were masculine.

167

 The men who were accused were neither outcasts nor 

strangers, and some of them were well-to-do merchants, farmers, and skalds. 

 

 

                                                 

163

 Ankarloo (2002), p. 91. 

164

 Heikkinen and Kervinen (1990), p. 322. 

165

 Hastrup (1990), pp.386-387. 

166

 Ankarloo (2002), p. 83. 

167

 Hastrup (1990), p. 387. 

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Demonic Lover and Sodomy 

 

Lust was considered by the Malleus Maleficarum one of the main reasons for the 

great majority of women witches. Confession of male witches being tempted by a 

succubus, a demon in female form, was occasionally mentioned, and was often missing 

from the account.

168

  

Homosexuality appears only rarely in the confessions.

169

 Up to the seventeenth 

century, theologians believed that even the devil was disgusted by sodomy , even though 

sodomites were thought to be committing a “diabolical sin.”

170

 But by the seventeenth 

century demonologists such as Pico della Mirandola, a famous humanist and scholar, 

argued that sexual desire was crucial in the devil’s recruitment of witches and that the 

devil, was not satisfied with tempting humans to engage in sexual relations with demons, 

but also in enticing them into same sex relations either with demons or with other 

humans.

171

 This is consistent with the increased importance that demonologists gave to 

the Sabbath, a subject barely mentioned in the Malleus, and more importantly to the 

sexual practices that were carried out in those assemblies and were described, usually 

under torture, by the witches who had attended them. 

 

 Pico does not agree with the Malleus that witchcraft is a feminine crime because 

of women’s lust for their demonic lovers. He claims that men lust after their demon 

lovers and “argues that both men and women join the diabolic sect because of their 

attraction to good-looking demons, be they succubi or incubi.”

172

  To  Pico  della 

                                                 

168

 Briggs (1996), p.250. 

169

 Apps and Gow (2003), p. 128. 

170

 Herzig, T., ‘The Demons’ Reaction to Sodomy: Witchcraft and Homosexuality in Gianfrancesco Pico 

della Mirandola’s Strix,’ Sixteenth Century Journal, 34:1 (2003), pp. 53-54. 

171

 Ibid. pp. 60-61. 

172

 Ibid. p. 69. 

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Mirandola, any man or woman engaging in sexual relations with a demon has committed 

a great sin and should be punished accordingly, like all other witches. 

 

Accusations 

 

It might be said that maleficium was the main charge brought against the 

European male witches. Indeed, in Finland, Iceland, and Russia most men were accused 

of causing harm, but these are countries where diabolical witchcraft and the Sabbath 

never took deep root. England, another country where cases of maleficium were 

prominent, had a clear female dominance of about ninety percent. In France, some 

provinces dealt with more cases of maleficium, and others dealt with Sabbaths and devil 

worship; many provinces dealing with maleficium had male witch dominance. 

 

As has already been stated, not all witches are the same. In Germany, where the 

Sabbath was a well developed idea, many men were accused participating in it as well as 

of maleficium, as can be seen in the cases of Dr. Flade, the former mayor Herr Fiedler, 

and Johannes Junius and his ‘friends’ from Bamberg. And even if the men were not 

accused of participating in the Sabbath, many times they did practice and were accused 

of diabolical witchcraft. Familiars were prominent in English witch-trials for women and 

men alike, as in the cases of John Walsh, Thoma Evard, and Arthur Bill, a clear 

indication of their dealing with the devil; both Jón Jónsson elder and younger, the father 

and son from Iceland, were accused of collusion with the devil. 

 

Male witches raised tempests, killed and harmed livestock, poisoned food and 

drinks, flew to witches’ Sabbath and danced in it, caused impotence and sterility, killed 

newborns and caused abortions, inflicted sickness in young and old people and 

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60

sometimes even killed them. Male witches were believed to have caused these and many 

other harms and cruelties, just female witches had, indeed sometimes the accused 

believed so themselves.  

 

The Male Witch in Court 

 

Between 1560 and 1587, John Sammond of Essex was accused been brought 

before the court several times on charges of witchcraft. John was acquitted until finally, 

after twenty-seven years he was found guilty and sentenced to be hanged.

173

 Is this a case 

of the leniency towards male witches? 

 

When charges of witchcraft were brought against John and his wife in 1572, two 

other witchcraft cases were deliberated in the session, but while John and his wife were 

released the other two witches, both female, were convicted. But in the assize session of 

1587, the one that found John Samond guilty, two women who had also been indicted for 

witchcraft were acquitted. 

If women were the norm for witchcraft accusations and, by all accounts, were 

treated harshly and tortured; was it not possible that men, who were supposed to be the 

greatest of God’s creations, a creature of reason, who should be above such temptations, 

as those of the flesh or material gains, should they not be treated even more severely? 

From the reading of the records, this cannot be said. Johannes Junius chillingly 

testifies to his daughter about the torture he endured while under interrogation for 

witchcraft. Ivashka Romanchiukov, the Russian inquisitor who was ordered to investigate 

the witches from Lukh, coldly and concisely writes in his report how he went about 

                                                 

173

 Apps and Gow (2003), pp. 49-52. 

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61

torturing the suspected witches, male and female. From Normandy we read of torture of 

many accused people, including a sixty-six year old man.

174

 

No leniency was given for age or gender. When the courts of Europe of the early 

modern period were confronted with a witch that was all that the courts saw. Gender 

mattered not, only the crime. And the punishment was severe. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
                                                 

174

 Monter (1997), p. 578. 

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5. Conclusions 

 

The western world and Christianity has a long history of depicting women as 

weak of mind and will, and easily corrupted. From that derives the predisposition towards 

women as witches. Explaining this predisposition has not been the goal of this paper, but 

rather, that this predisposition has obscured the fact that alongside women, men witches 

were similarly persecuted and prosecuted. 

The role of gender in the study of the witch-hunt is important, but is not of utmost 

significance. Its importance stems from the fact that there were more female than male 

witches; this was not due to some misogynistic battle, or a male-dominance agenda, but 

to a deeply ingrained predisposition of the western culture, influenced by the Old and 

New Testaments, and by other external factors, that women are physically and mentally 

weak. This predisposition was not invented by the demonologists and ‘witchmongers’ of 

the era, it was already in place by the time they wrote in their treatises why they thought 

women were more susceptible to the calling and deception of the devil than were men. 

The witch was not defined by his or her gender, but by the crime he or she was accused 

of. Black-letter law did not distinguish between the male and female witch, a witch that 

was brought before the court was judged for the crime he or she had committed with no 

regard to sex.  

Chapter Two examines the texts written by some of the intellectuals of the era, 

and tried to discern their position on male witches. All of these authors ascribe to the 

notion that most witches are women; some would go into great detail as to the reason for 

which women are more prone to witchcraft, while others will be content to relate about 

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63

the different crimes associated with witches. But not one of them would claim that 

witchcraft was only a woman’s crime; it was a crime mainly of women, or of a majority 

of women, but not only of women. All these texts recognized that men could, and indeed, 

did fall into witchcraft; even the Malleus maleficarum, the most ardently, almost 

fanatically, biased book against women as witches does not claim that witches are 

exclusively women, giving us several examples of male witches, and has already been 

shown, uses the male form for witch about thirty percent of the time. All of the authors 

acknowledged the existence of the male witches; these authors also agreed that all 

witches, male and female, should be dealt with in the same merciless way.  

Further deduced from the reading of the texts is that in most cases no single sex 

had a monopoly on any specific crime, the only exception being the Malleus maleficarum 

which described three forms of witchcraft attributed to exclusively to men. Men and 

women, it seems, were accused of roughly the same crimes, as can be seen by the 

pamphlets and case studies that have been presented; the courts dealt sternly with both 

male and female witches. 

Male witches were in no way unthinkable to the people living during the witch-

hunts. Throughout the years, with the passage of time and partial reading of the texts, and 

with the multitude of cases against women, the witch became synonymous with the 

female. Only recently have we began to examine these other witches and found out that 

even though they are physiologically different, they are in many ways much the same. 

 

 

 

 

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64

Appendix A 

 

MacNeill and Gamer’s Medieval Handbooks of Penance is an invaluable source for 

any student of the history of penance and the penitentials who does not have access to the 

originals and/or to the Latin language. What follows is a list compiled of all the places in 

the book mentioning magic, enchanters, witches, wizards, pagan practices, etc. * 

 

ƒ

  Canons attributed to St. Patrick: 16 

(p. 78)

 

ƒ

  Penitential of Finnian: 18, 20 

(p. 90)

 

ƒ

  The Penitential of Theodore: Book I, chap. XV 

(p. 198)

 

ƒ

  Penitentiales Ascribed by Albers to Bede: X 

(pp. 22-229)

 

ƒ

  The Confessional of Egbert: 29, 32, 33 

(pp. 246-247)

 

ƒ

  The Penitential of Columban: 6 

(pp. 252-253)

 

ƒ

  The Burgundian Penitential: 9, 10 

(p. 274)

 24, 25,

 (p. 275-6)

34, 36 

(p. 276-277)

 

ƒ

  The Penitential of Silos: VII 

(p. 288) 

 

ƒ

  The St. Hubert Penitential: 25 

(p. 292)

, 54 

(p. 294)

 

ƒ

  The so-called Roman Penitential: 31-33, 35-44

 (pp. 305-307)

 

ƒ

  Regino’s Ecclesiastical Discipline

p. 318

 

ƒ

  The Corrector of Burchard of Worms:

 

60, 61, 63-70, 90-104, 149-181, 193, 194 

(pp. 325-341)

 

ƒ

  The Penitential of Bartholomew Iscanus:

 pp. 349-350

 

ƒ

  The Milan Penitential

p. 365

 

ƒ

  Capitualary of the Saxon territories

pp. 389-390

 

ƒ

  Appendix I – An Eight Century List of Superstitions, 

pp. 419-421

 

 
 

In Italics is the name of the text and the sections which refer to the practices. Some are not arranged into 
sections and so only the page number is given. 

 

 

 

 
 

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65

Appendix B 

Figure 1: "Witch Giving Ritual Kiss to Devil" 

 

 

Figure 2: “Witches Offering Newborn to Devil” 

 

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66

Bibliography 

 
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J.L., (Toronto, 1995). 

 
Guazzo, Francesco Maria., Compendium maleficarum (Milan, 1608), ed. M. Summers, 

trans. E.A. Ashwin (London 1929; New York, 1988). 

 
Innocent VIII,, Summis desiderantes, (1484), trans. G.L. Burr, The Witch Persecutions 

(Philadelphia, 1902). 

 
James VI and I., Daemonologie; Includes News from Scotland, on the Death of a Notable 

Sorcerer (Edinburgh, 1597; repr. New York, 1966). 

 
Krämer, Heinrich (Institoris) and Sprenger, Jakob (James), Malleus Maleficarum (1487), 

ed. and trans. M Summers, (London, 1928; repr. 1948). 

 
Harmon, A.M. Lucian in Eight Volumes, Loeb Classical Library (London, 1913). 
 
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Secondary Sources 
 
Anglo, S., ‘Scpeticism and Sadduceeism’ in Anglo (ed.) The Damned Art (London, 

Henley and Boston, 1977). 

 
Ankarloo, B., ‘Witch Trials in Northern Europe 1450-1700’ in Ankraloo and Clark (eds.) 

Witchcraft and Magic in Europe: the Period of the Witch Trials ((Philadelphia, 
2002) pp. 55-95. 

 
Apps, L. and Gow, A., Male Witches in Early Modern Europe (Manchester, 2003). 
 
Bert, H., ‘Science and Magic’ in Science in the Middle Ages, Lindberg (ed.) (Chicago, 

1978) pp.483-506. 

 
Brauner, S., Fearless Wives and Frightened Shrews, Brown (ed. posthumous) (Amherst, 

1995). 

 
Briggs, R., Witches & Neighbors (New York, 1996). 
 

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67

Clark, S., Thinking with Demons (Oxford, 1997). 
-------‘Witchcraft and Magic in Early Modern Culture’ in Ankraloo and Clark (eds.) 

Witchcraft and Magic in Europe: the Period of the Witch Trials ((Philadelphia, 
2002) pp. 99-169 

 
Gaskill, M., Crime and Mentalities in Early Modern England (Cambridge, 2000) 
-------‘The Devil in the shape of a man: Witchcraft, conflict, and belief in Jacobean 

 England,’ Historical Research 71:175 (1988) pp. 142-178 

 
Gibson, M., Reading Witchcraft (London and New York, 1999) 
-------Early Modern Witches (London and New York, 2000) 
 
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Hastrup, K., ‘Iceland: Sorcerers and Paganism’ in Ankarloo and Henningsen (eds.) Early 

Modern European Witchcraft: Centers and Peripheries (Oxford, 1990) pp. 383-
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Heikkinen, A., and Kervvinen T. ‘Finland: The Male Domination’ in Ankarloo and 

Henningsen (eds.) Early Modern European Witchcraft, centers and peripheries 
(Oxford, 1990) pp. 319-338. 

 
Herzig, T. ‘The Demons’ Reaction to Sodomy: Witchcraft and Homosexuality in 

Gianfrancesco Pico della Mirandola’s Strix,’  Sixteenth Century Journal, 34:1 
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Klaits, J., Servants of Satan (Bloomington, 1985). 
 
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2

). 

 
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study (London, 1970). 

 
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1938). 

 
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Intellectual Foundations (Stanford, 1972). 

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68

 
Monter, W., ‘Toads and Eucharists: The Male Witches of Normandy, 1564-1660.’ 

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2002) pp. 3-52. 

 
Naess, H. E., ‘Norway: The Criminological Context’ in Ankarloo and  Henningsen (eds.) 

Early Modern European Witchcraft: Centers and Peripheries (Oxford, 1990) 
pp.369-382. 

 
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1940) pp. 210-223. 

 
Quaife, G. R., Godly Zeal and Furious Rage (Kent, 1987). 
 
Peters, E., ‘The Medieval Church and State on Superstition, Magic and Witchcraft: from 

Augustine to the Sixteenth Century’ in Ankraloo and Clark (eds.) Witchcraft and 
Magic in Europe: the Middle Ages
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Russell, J.B., Witchcraft in the Middle Ages (Ithaca and London, 1972, 1984). 
 
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and Magic in Europe: the Middle Ages (Philadelphia, 2002) pp. 75-171. 

 
Sharpe, J.A., ‘Witchcraft and Women in seventeenth century England: some Northern

 Evidence,’ Continuity and Change 6:2 (1991) pp. 179-199.  

-------(ed.) English Witchcraft, 1560-1736 (London, 2003). vol. 3. 
 
Tedeschi, J., ‘Inquisitorial Law and the Witch’ in Ankarloo and Henningsen (eds.) Early 

Modern European Witchcraft, centers and peripheries (Oxford, 1990) pp. 83-118. 

 
Thomas, K., Religion and the Decline of Magic (Trowbridge and London, 1971). 
 
Trevor-Roper, H.R., The European Witch-Craze of the 16

th

 and 17

th

 Centuries 

(Harmondsworth, 1969). 

 
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Review, 82:5 (1977) pp. 1187-1207. 

 
 

 

 

 

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69

ריצקת

  

ה תואמה ןיב הפוריאב

-

15

ה ו 

-

17

 ,

כ

-

110,000

שוכרל קזנ תמירגב ומשאוה דחאכ םירבגו םישנ 

 ,

םייח  ילעב

  ,

ףושיכ  ידי  לע  םישנאו

  ,

ןטסל  הדיגס  ידכ  ךות  ירצונה  ושיב  הנומאל  ףרוע  תיינפהבו

  .

 םירקחמב

ןייע תמלעה התייה תונורחאה םינשה האמ ךלהמב ושענש םיברה

 ,

נווכמ דימת אל םנמוא

ת

 ,

 םידדצה דחאמ

גרוהל  תואצוהו  תומשאה  ןכ  םג  הווחש

  :

םירבגה

  .

 םישנ  המל  הלאשה  ביבס  ודקמתה  םירקחמהמ  דבכנ  קלח

םימשאנה לש יראה קלחה תא תווהמ

 ,

ולא םישנ ויה קוידב ימ

 ,

םישנ תאנש לש האצות התייה וז םאהו

.

  

ב דקמתי הז רקחמ

-

 

25%

 דע 

30%

םירבגה םיווהמש 

 ,

םיפשכמ

 ,

נאה לולכמ ךותמ

 ומשאוהש םיש

ףושיכב

 ,

קודביו

 :

ויה םה ימ

 ?

םתוא ומישאה המב

 ?

ךיא

 ,

ללכב םא

 ,

 םיגולונומדהו םילאוטקלטניאה םתוא ואר

ףושיכ לע ובתכש םתפוקתמ

 ?

ולא םיפשכמל טפשמה יתב לש םסחי היה המ

 ,

 וסחייתה וא םתיא ורימחה םאהו

די תלזואב םהילא

?

  

 תלחהב ויה ףושיכב ומשאוהש םירבגש הארי רקחמה

 ונתנשו םהילע ובתכש םילאוטקלטניאל םירכומ

גרוהל  ואצוהו  ףושיכב  ןקסעש  םירבג  לש  תואמגוד  טעמ  אל

  .

 ויהו  ונימאה  םלוכ  םהש  הדבועהו  וז  הדבוע

  לשב  רתוי  הלודג  הנכס  תווהמ  םישנ  יכ  םיחוטב

"

תיזיפה  ןתשלוח

"

  ,

  לשב  רתוי  ךא

"

 תירסומה  ןתשלוח

טנמו

א

תיל

"

 ,

יינשה תא תחא תורטוס אל

ה

 .

ב היה

םישנ לש בור תלחה

 ,

 אל םילאוטקלטניא םתואמ דחא ףא לבא

הז עשפמ םיפח םירבגש ןעט וא ןיע םילעה

.

  

םישנה יפלכ ונפוהש תומשאהמ תילכתב תונוש ויה אל  םירבגב וחיטהש תומשאהה

 .

 םישנכ םירבג

תוכורא  תועש  ורקחות

  ,

וקדבנ

  ,

פתוש  םה  ימו  תופשכמ  וא  םיפשכמ  םה  םא  תולגל  ידכב  םייוניע  ורבעו

 םהי

עשפל

 .

גרוהל ואצוה וא וררחוש םישנכ םירבג

 .

םינימה ןיב לדבה האר אל שביה קוחה

 ,

 תא ולהינש םירבגהו

ו ףושיכב קסועה הרקימ לוכ הרמוח התואב ואר טפשמה יתב

\

ןטסל הדיגס וא

 .

  

  

 

  
  
  
  
  

background image

 

70

ןב תטיסרבינוא

-

בגנב ןוירוג

 

הרבחהו חורה יעדמל הטלוקפה

  

תיללכ הירוטסיהל הקלחמה

  

  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

מה

ףסונה רדג

:

  

  

עה תליחתב םיפשכמה

ת

הפוריאב השדחה 

  

  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

ראותה תלבקל תושירדהמ קלח הווהמ הז רוביח

  

 

"

הרבחהו חורה יעדמל ךמסומ

) "

M.A

(

  

  
  
  
  
  
  

תאמ

 :

םר ןונרא

  

תייחנהב

 :

רד

 '

הנליא

 

ןב ןמזוארק

-

 סומע

  

  

  
  
  
  

 

לולא

סשת 

"

ו

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

רבמטפס

 

2006

  

 

 


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