Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Witch Hunt In Modern Europe Essays - Witchcraft, Witch Trials, Magic
  Witch Hunt In Modern Europe  The Witch-Hunt in Modern Europe by Brian Levack proved to be an interesting as  well as insightful look at the intriguing world of the European practice of  witchcraft and witch-hunts. The book offers a solid, reasonable interpretation  of the accusation, prosecution, and execution for witchcraft in Europe between    1450 and 1750. Levack focuses mainly on the circumstances from which the  witch-hunts emerged, as this report will examine. The causes of witch-hunting  have been sometimes in publications portrayed differently from reality. The  hunts were not prisoner escapee type hunts but rather a hunt that involved the  identification of individuals who were believed to be engaged in a secret  activity. Sometimes professional witch-hunters carried on the task, but judicial  authorities performed most. The cause of most of these hunts is the multi-causal  approach, which sees the emergence of new ideas about the witches and changes in  the criminal law statutes. Both point to major religious changes and a lot of  social tension among society. The intellectual foundations of the hunts were  attributed to the witch's face-to-face pact with the devil and the periodic  meetings of witches to engage in practices considered to be barbaric and  heinous. The cumulative concept of witchcraft pointed immediately to the devil,  the source of the magic and the one most witches adored. There was strong belief  then that witches made pacts with the devil. Some would barter their soul to the  devil in exchange for a gift or a taste of well being. Many believed that these  witches observed a nocturnal Sabbath where they worshipped the devil and paid  their homage to him. They were also accused of being an organization known for  its cannibalistic practices of infanticide incest. Another component of this  cumulative concept was the belief of the flight of witches. The belief for this  was contributed to by the assumption that witches took flight from their homes  to goto nocturnal meetings without their absence from home being detected. The  belief in "flying night witches" was shared by many cultures in the modern  world. These women were referred to as strigae, which was one of the many Latin  terms for witches. As the reader first opens the legal foundations of  witch-hunting, one finds that historically it was a judicial process from  discovery to elimination. Levack states that before the thirteenth century    European courts used a system of criminal procedure that made all crimes  difficult to prosecute. This system was known as the accusatorial system and  existed predominantly in northwestern Europe. When the thirteenth century came  into being, a new technique, which gave more human judgement in the criminal  process, was adopted in Western Europe secular courts. This new court was known  as inquisitorial courts. The only difference between the new system and the old  when suits were begun by accusation was that the accuser was no longer  responsible for the actual prosecution of the case (pg. 72). The new procedures  were not in reality an improvement due to the fact that the standards of proof  according to inquisitorial procedure were very demanding. Since the adoption of  inquisitorial procedure represented a shift from reliance upon man's rational  judgement, jurists agreed that it was absolutely necessary for judges to have  conclusive proof of guilt before passing sentence (pg. 79). They relied on Roman  law and based their conclusions on two eyewitnesses and the confession of the  accused. The development of full judicial power given to the state in the  prosecution of a crime was a major event. From the early times, the secular  courts in Europe had taken part in the witch-hunts, and now as the hunt  developed further along, the secular courts grew an even greater role in the  process. This caused a decline in ecclesiastical court participation due to the  fact that governments defined witchcraft as a secular crime, and the temporal  courts of some countries had a monopoly on the prosecution. The prosecution of  magic was a "mixed jurisdiction" taken on by both courts but when convicted  the guilty were executed under secular law. Since secular courts had  jurisdiction over magic and maleficium they primarily assumed the significant  role in prosecuting witches. As the hunt gathered steam in the sixteenth  century, the developments resulted in a reduction of clerical jurisdiction and  an increase in the amount of secular concern with it. The main reason was the  defining of witchcraft as a secular crime. All of these factors led to a  large-scale witch-hunts in Scotland but in some countries the retention of  ecclesiastical jurisdiction over the crime led to a decline in    
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