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A History of Witchcraft, Sorcerers, Heretics, and Pagans

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Beacon Lights of History, Volume 01 the Old Pagan Civilizations

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5 Responses to A History of Witchcraft, Sorcerers, Heretics, and Pagans

  • Bocasdeltorro says:

    Review by Bocasdeltorro for A History of Witchcraft, Sorcerers, Heretics, and Pagans
    Rating:
    I really appreciated reading this book, which is the work of a serious religious scholar. I am a very Wicca-friendly, Pagan-wise person (in my opinion), and certainly do not believe the heart or soul of a religion can be judged better by scholars than by practitioners. But I also think critically, love history and respect fact. This book settled a lot of questions that books written by either firm believers or ranting detractors failed to.This is a fair book, well-researched. It lays the groundwork for 3 kinds of “witchery” in human history: “sorcery,” which has belonged to and persists in all cultures, all religions, at all times, in various forms, with various levels of acceptance; “diabolical witchcraft,” which is an “invention of the [European] Middle Ages,” a compendium of folklore + religious bigotry + political expediency + etc….; and “modern witchcraft,” which is a “new religion.” And he, thankfully, makes it clear that Wicca and Paganism are not in any way satanic: “Satanism today is quite different from historical witchcraft, however, and it is totally rejected by all the neopagan witches today. Modern witches observe that since they reject Christianity they can scarecely be supposed to worship a Christian Devil. I describe Satansim here only so that the lack of resemblance between it and witchcraft may be clear.”While Russell’s book deals mostly with religious and historical analysis and his critique of the claims of early 20th-century folklorists (such as Margaret Murray, whose “The Witch-cult of Western Europe” and “God of the Witches” have now been — whether some folks like it or not — proven largely, though not entirely, ill-grounded in their conclusions), he gives due credit to the living belief systems of modern day Pagans and Wiccans. While he reveals the sometimes sordid esotericism of the Crowley-Gardener heritage of modern Wicca, he does not use old rumors and scandals (even Crowley’s well-known dabbling with diabolism) to tarnish contemporary witches or their religion. As he says, “That Gardener (or Crowley) invented the religion does not invalidate it. Every religion has a founder, and much that surrounds the origin of every religion is historically suspect. Lack of historicity does not necessarily deprive a religion of its insight.”As Russell concludes his book, after two chapters that respectfully (sometimes it seemed even ‘lovingly’) set out the practices of Wicca in 20th-C, “One need not be a witch — I am not — to understand witchcraft as a valid expression of the religious experience. The religion of withcraft offers to restore a lost option, paganism, to our religious world view. Both Christianity and scientism have taught us falsely that paganism is nonsense… This is not an informed view… The neopagan witches are attempting to recreate the positive values of pagan religion.”

  • Anthony Q. Thompson says:

    Review by Anthony Q. Thompson for A History of Witchcraft, Sorcerers, Heretics, and Pagans
    Rating:
    Gives a detailed history of historiacal withchcraft and neopagan witchcraft, seperating the fabricated neopagan rhetoric from historical fact. Recommended to anyone interested in the real history of witchcraft.

  • diane.pencil@lexis-nexis.com says:

    Review by diane.pencil@lexis-nexis.com for A History of Witchcraft, Sorcerers, Heretics, and Pagans
    Rating:
    While there are many books to choose from on this subject, Jeffery Russell manages to both educate and entertain. Taken from a stricty historical viewpoint, this book is both concise and poignant at times. The text reads more like a personal account from a not so casual observer while still managing to sprinkle in all the dry and sometimes lurid details. Having read many of the historical accounts as well as those with a position to defend or deny, I feel this book is the best I have read on the subject. While not a long book, quantatively there is more great information page for page than in any other single book I’ve read on witchcraft. This is not the be all end all book that “Drawing Down the Moon” tries to be for the believer. Instead it gives an excellent, engaging, account following a timeline which allows the reader to take into account the atmosphere of the time rather than remove the subject and give a disconnected sanitary synopsis of a fear that grew over time.

  • Matthew S. Schweitzer says:

    Review by Matthew S. Schweitzer for A History of Witchcraft, Sorcerers, Heretics, and Pagans
    Rating:
    Jeffery Burton Russell is well known for his works on the history and myth of the Devil. Here Russell provides us with a very well-researched introduction to historical witchcraft that seeks to give an overview of the essential influences and origins of witchcraft and the Christian myths of diabolic magic and demonic pacts that eventually lead to the virulent witch-craze of the Renaissance and early modern period. Russell identifies several essential elements that influenced European thought and lead to the persecution and murder of tens of thousands of suspected “witches”. These are: sorcery, ancient pagan religious beliefs, Christian theology, Inqusitorial and other anti-witch writings. These elements provided the basis for a belief in diabolic witchcraft that, modern historians largely argue, never existed and erupted in the period between 1450-1750 in the largest witch hysteria in history. However, Russell shows that these types of events are not relegated to the past, but can occurr in any society at any time, such as Nazi Germany or Stalinist Russia in recent times. Russell analyzes the witch hunts in Europe, England, and the American Colonies and contrasts the various judicial methods and popular beliefs regarding them. For instance, it is interesting to note that unlike on the Continent, England viewed the crime of witchcraft as a civil rather than religious matter. This has alot to do with the connection between witchcraft and chrisitan heresy that was prevalent in Europe in the centuries prior to the beginning of the witch hunts but that was largely absent from English history. Russell continues with an analyses of the decline of the witch-craze and the rise of general skepticism and disbelief in witchery. He shows that by the late 18th century, the accusation and execution of suspected witches had all but ceased. It was only in the late 19th century that a revived nterest in magic and the occult gave rise to a romanticized interst in witchcraft. Russell concludes with an overview of the history of modern-day witchcraft and neo-paganism and the lingering perceptions that the public maintains about it.This is an excellent introduction to the academic history of witchcraft and should lead interested readers to a more in-depth study regarding one of the most horrific periods in human history.

  • Anonymous says:

    Review by for A History of Witchcraft, Sorcerers, Heretics, and Pagans
    Rating:
    I was highly impressed with this book. The author deals not only with the history of Witchcraft, but sheds light on how many of the common ideas and misconceptions concerning Witchcraft came into being. What he gives is a fairly broad overview of European and American Witchcraft’s overall developement and proper place in history. He leads up to, and deals briefly with modern Pagan Witchcraft, but focuses primarily on earlier developement prior to the 20th century. Read this for the broad view, and Ronald Hutton’s _Triumph of the Moon_ for a more narrowly focused view, and you’ll have pretty well all the common misconceptions and misinformation still prevailant within the Witchcraft community today cleared away. Money well spent.

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