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Authors: John Demos

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CHAPTER III
The
Malleus Maleficarum
: A Book and Its Travels
1484; the town of Ravensburg (in what today is southwestern Germany, near the Swiss border). A team of Catholic priests, members of the Dominican order, presses forward with an investigation of witchcraft. Their leader is a dedicated and experienced inquisitor named Heinrich Kramer (sometimes Latinized to Institoris). Eight women are put on trial for causing injury to people and animals, and for raising “tempests” to destroy the harvest. This is, in fact, the culmination of a four-year campaign within the town and its satellite villages; the roster of the accused will eventually total 48. At least half this number, perhaps more, will be convicted and burnt at the stake.
From Ravensburg the witch-hunters move on to Innsbruck, a large Tyrolean community farther east. But here their reception is different. The resident bishop declines to support the charges they bring against several local women and derides Kramer as a “senile old man.” After some weeks the accused are set free, and the inquisitors are forced to depart.
In fact, Kramer's efforts against witches have achieved only mixed results—success here, resistance there—in the dozen or so years since the papacy named him chief inquisitor for southern Germany. Thus, at some point in the early 1480s, he and his Dominican colleague Jakob Sprenger decide to seek a stronger mandate. They appeal to the newly installed pope, Innocent VIII, who quickly obliges them with a “bull” (official statement) that amounts to a license for unlimited witch-hunting.
“It has come to our ears,” the pope writes, “that in some parts of upper
[
i.e. southern
]
Germany . . . many persons of both sexes . . . forsaking the Catholic faith, give themselves over to devils.” These miscreants then use “incantations, charms, and conjurings” in causing all sorts of harm to
“men and women, cattle and flocks and herds . . . vineyards also and orchards, meadows, pastures, harvests, grains, and other fruits of the earth. . . . Moreover, they deny with sacreligious lips the faith they received in holy baptism.” (The list of their “abominable offenses and crimes” goes on and on. And it seems strangely reminiscent, in at least some details, of the crimes attributed to the early Christians more than a millennium before.) To make matters worse, “certain of the clergy and laity” impede the work of “our beloved sons” (Kramer and Sprenger) in bringing such persons to account; hence “the aforesaid offenses . . . go unpunished.” This situation cannot be permitted to continue; from now on the inquisitors will have free and full scope for “correcting, imprisoning, punishing, and chastising, according to their deserts, those whom they shall find guilty.”
At about the same point, Kramer embarks on a further, and closely related, project: to prepare a book about his inquisitorial activities. Written in Latin, entitled the
Malleus Maleficarum (
English translation:
The Hammer of Witches),
and published at Strasbourg in 1486, this work will come to be seen as an epitome of witch-hunting.
 
The
Malleus
was not the first work of its kind—a list of witchcraft treatises from the preceding half century runs to more than three dozen—but it would become far and away the most famous. Read today, it seems very much a hybrid: part bible, part encyclopedia, part operational guide. It is long: some 400 pages in a mid-20th century reprinting. It is densely written, with lots of heavy scholastic verbiage: “Here is set forth” . . . “With reference to these words it is to be noted that” . . . “Firstly . . . secondly . . . thirdly . . . fourthly.” Its expository method is basically that of a catechism, with questions raised (and answered), objections posed (and resolved), principles stated, “admonitions” tendered, conclusions declared. Its goal is to describe and analyze the entire panoply of witch-related phenomena, and to offer judges and fellow inquisitors a comprehensive model of response.
The book has three main parts. (Its preface is the pope's recent bull, republished entire.) The first part lays some theoretical groundwork—by establishing that disbelief in witches is rank heresy, by showing the irrevocable connection between witches and the Devil, by canvassing the numerous harms
(maleficia)
they bring, and by tracing their usual biographical profile (with special emphasis on their female gender). The second part describes the leading forms of witchcraft—its causal ways and means—and declares certain general principles of investigation. And the third part provides an exhaustive account of the legal steps to be taken against witches: details of charging, examining (including the use of torture), sentencing, and executing.
The argument builds and builds, through abundant reference to “authorities”: to the Scriptures, most of all, but also to patristic sources (especially St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas) and other demonologists from around the same time period, as well as to classical writers and philosophers with something valuable to say on the subject (Aristotle, Cicero, Seneca, Terence, Cato, and many more). It also invokes the “credible experience” of the authors themselves in pursuing their targets. As such, the
Malleus
is, from first to last, a compendium of stories: here are a few representative examples.
A young girl in the village of Breisach (near Basel, Switzerland) was “converted” to witchcraft by her aunt who “had [subsequently] been burned in the diocese of Strasbourg.” This aunt “one day . . . ordered her to go upstairs . . . where she found fifteen young men clothed in green garments after the manner of German knights.” She was then “sorely beaten” and forced to have sex with one (or more) of the men, and afterward was “initiated” into the Devil's ranks. During the following weeks and months she “was often transported by night . . . over vast distances” in order to meet other witches “in conclave.” There she observed the ritual killing of infants; among other horrors, she recalled a time when “she had opened a secret pot and found the heads of a great many children.”
A confessed witch “in the state of Berne” (Switzerland) also spoke of child-murder, and added to it the element of cannibalism. “We set our snares chiefly for unbaptized children, . . . and with our spells we kill them in their cradles or even when they are sleeping by their parents' sides. . . . Then we secretly take them from their graves and cook them in a cauldron, until the whole flesh comes away from the bones to make a soup which may easily be drunk. Of the more solid matter we make an unguent which is to help us in our arts and pleasures and our transportations; and with the liquids we fill a flask or skin—whoever drinks from which, with the addition of a few other ceremonies, immediately acquires much knowledge and becomes a leader in our sect.”
A third story, from the German town of Regensburg, where Kramer's inquisition had just recently been active, expressed another theme very prominent in the
Malleus:
sexual dysfunction, supposedly caused by witchcraft. A young man, having broken off “an intrigue with a girl,” suddenly “lost his member . . . so that he could see or touch nothing but his smooth body.” During a visit to a local tavern, he lamented his loss to a fellow patron, who urged that he confront his former sweetheart and demand her to “restore to you your health.” He did just that, but the girl protested her innocence; whereupon “he fell upon her, and . . . choked her,” threatening her very life. At this, “She . . . with her face already swelling and growing black, said ‘Let me go, and I will heal you.' ” And she “touched him with her hand between the thighs, saying ‘Now you have what you desire.' And the young man . . . plainly felt . . . that his member had been restored to him by the mere touch of this witch.”
This last belonged to a much larger discussion—of witches, devils, and sex. The key questions included: “How in Modern Times Witches perform the Carnal Act with Incubus Devils”; “How, as it were, they Deprive Man of his Virile Member”; and “Whether the Relations of an Incubus Devil with a Witch are always accompanied by the Injection of Semen.” Some of the answers were ingenious and mystifying (as perhaps befits such a literally Satanic subject). For instance: in order to effect their “abominable coitus,” devils would assume bodily form “through condensation by means of gross vapors raised from the earth.” Devils, and witches too, might then create “an illusion of glamor . . . to collect male organs in great numbers, as many as twenty or thirty members together, and put them in a bird's nest, or shut them up in a box, where they move themselves like living members . . . as has been seen by many and is a matter of common report.” Indeed, the questions went on and on. Where did the semen used on these occasions come from? (Perhaps the Devil would collect what he needed from “nocturnal pollutions in sleep.” Or possibly he got it by taking the form of a woman and seducing concupiscent men.) Did intercourse between devils and witches afford “venereal pleasure”? (In some cases, yes; but a devil's penis was often uncomfortably cold.) And might such connection lead to pregnancy—and thus to devil-spawned children? (When certain necessary “causes concur,” the result could well be “progeny that are . . . [uncommonly] powerful and big in body.”) In one way or another, the sex act was crucial to the spread of witchcraft, not only because of its “natural nastiness,” but also because it had “caused the corruption of our first parents and, by its contagion, brought the inheritance of original sin on the whole human race.”
Child-murder and sex are recurrent preoccupations in the
Malleus
. But what seems most striking of all, as viewed from half a millennium later, is something else again: the flat-out, unblinking misogyny in which the entire work is drenched. Right at the start, the authors asked: “Why it is that women are chiefly addicted to evil superstitions?” Then, at great length and with fervent conviction, they offered their answer. Women, they declared—invoking long-familiar stereotypes—are “more credulous” and “more impressionable” and “feebler in mind and body” than men; these qualities, separately and together, naturally invite the attentions of the Devil. But this is just the beginning. A woman has a “slippery tongue,” and is “a liar by nature.” Thus she inclines always to “deceit”; moreover, “her gait, posture, and habit [betray her] vanity of vanities.” A further “natural reason” for her basic “perfidy” is that “she is more carnal than a man, as is clear from her many carnal abominations”; indeed, her “carnal lust . . . is insatiable.” Finally, “it should be noted that there was a defect in the formation of the first woman, since she was formed from a bent rib . . . in a contrary direction to a man. [Thus] she is an imperfect animal.” To repeat: credulous, impressionable, feeble in mind and body; lying, deceitful, vain; insatiably carnal; and defectively formed in the first place. Put the whole together, and “it is no matter for wonder that there are many more women [than men] found infected with the heresy of witchcraft.”
Perhaps it seems unsurprising that two aging male priests, sworn to lifelong celibacy, would spew such pointedly woman-hating invective. But, in fact, Kramer and Sprenger were as careful here as throughout the
Malleus
to cite numerous other writings in support of their views. Again and again they invoked the Bible: for example, “There is no wrath above the wrath of a woman” (Ecclesiastes 25). And also the saints: “What else is a woman but a foe to friendship, an inescapable punishment, a necessary evil, a natural temptation, a desirable calamity, a domestic danger, a delectable detriment, an evil of nature painted with fair colors” (St. John Chrysostom). And, not least, the sages of antiquity: “The many lusts of men lead them into one sin; but the one lust of women leads them into all sins; for the root of all woman's vices is avarice” (Cicero). Indeed, this aspect of the
Malleus
is best understood as a pulling together of misogynous attitudes from many different sources and centuries. As such, it exemplifies a virtual mother lode of feeling (especially, but not exclusively, in men) that fueled witch-hunting everywhere.
In its final section, the
Malleus
turns from theory to practice—from witchcraft as a social, cultural, and cosmological presence to the specific requirements of inquisition. Witch-hunting was then in the early stages of a highly consequential shift; formerly the special province of the church, it would soon become a prime focus for the state, as papal inquisitors yielded more and more responsibility to secular courts and judges. The
Malleus
was a major instigator, both in furnishing overall warrant and as a source of particular strategies and tactics. The chief arguments favoring secular prosecution were: “First, because . . . the crime of witches is not purely ecclesiastical, being rather civil on account of the temporal injuries they commit”; second, “because special laws are provided for dealing with witches”; and, “finally, because it seems that in this way it is easiest to proceed with the extermination of witches.” The
Malleus
did, at every point, emphasize
maleficia
(“temporal injuries”) over broadly theological issues. Governments had recently begun to write witchcraft into statute law. And, for certain, there was no quicker, more efficient way to achieve the ultimate goal of witch “extermination.”
The specifics, reflecting as they did the authors' direct experience, ran the gamut from basic principles of law to elaborate counter-magical tips. Thus, on the one hand: “The judge is not bound to publish the names of deponents”; or, “an Advocate shall be allotted to the accused”; or, “while she is being questioned about each point, let her be often and frequently exposed to torture”; or, “take note whether she is able to shed tears . . . [for] if she be a witch, she will not be able to weep.” Yet, on the other hand, there are certain detailed “precautions” to be taken by judges and their assistants: “They must not allow themselves to be touched physically by the witch . . . [and] they must always carry about them some salt consecrated on Palm Sunday or other Blessed Herbs . . . [as] remedies against illnesses and diseases caused by witchcraft.” Moreover: “The witch should be led backward into the presence of the Judge [to prevent her from casting an evil eye]. And “the hair should be shaved from every part of her body . . . [since witches] are in the habit of hiding some superstitious object . . . in their hair, or even in the most secret parts of their bodies, which must not be named.” Follow such procedures, the
Malleus
concluded, and judges would be safe, witches would be punished (or “eliminated”), justice would be served.

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