Narratives of sorcery and magic
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Narratives of sorcery and magic
(Cambridge library collection)
Cambridge University Press, 2012
- v. 1 : pbk
- v. 2 : pbk
- Other Title
-
Narratives of sorcery and magic : from the most authentic sources
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Faculty of Letters Library, University of Tokyo宗教
v. 1 : pbkP:330:14818579619,
v. 2 : pbkP:330:24818579627
Note
"This digitally printed version 2012"--T.p. verso
Reprint. Originally published: London : R. Bentley , 1851
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
v. 1 : pbk ISBN 9781108044189
Description
The English historian and antiquary Thomas Wright (1810-70) co-founded and joined a number of antiquarian and literary societies. He was greatly interested in Old English, Middle English and Anglo-Norman texts, and in the 1840s and 1850s he published widely within these areas. Gradually his focus shifted to the archaeology of Roman Britain and to Anglo-Saxon cemeteries. Although much of Wright's research has been completely superseded, his work is still considered worth consulting, as he collected material not readily available elsewhere. This two-volume 1851 publication is testimony to Wright's interest in folklore, sorcery and legend. In Volume 1 the author accounts of sorcery across Europe, and he considers the legendary Dr Faustus as an archetypal magician who called 'the demon'. Wright also discusses the place of the occult in England during and after the Reformation, writing about magicians such as John Dee, and describing King James I's views on witchcraft.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Story of the lady Alice Kyteler
- 3. Further political usage of the belief in sorcery. The Templars
- 4. Sorcery in France. The citizens of Arras
- 5. The lord of Mirebeau and Pierre d'Estaing the alchemist
- 6. The earlier medieval type of the sorcerer. Virgil the enchanter
- 7. The later medieval types of the magician. Friar Bacon and Dr Faustus
- 8. Sorcery in Germany in the fifteenth century. The Malleus Maleficarum
- 9. Witchcraft in Scotland in the sixteenth century
- 10. King James and the witches of Lothian
- 11. Magic in England during the age of the Reformation
- 12. The English magicians. Dr Dee and his followers
- 13. The witches of Warboys
- 14. The poetry of witchcraft
- 15. Witchcraft in France in the sixteenth century
- 16. Pierre de Lancre and the witches of Labourd
- 17. Magic in Spain. The auto-da-fe of Logrono.
- Volume
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v. 2 : pbk ISBN 9781108044196
Description
The English historian and antiquary Thomas Wright (1810-70) co-founded and joined a number of antiquarian and literary societies. He was greatly interested in Old English, Middle English and Anglo-Norman texts, and in the 1840s and 1850s he published widely within these areas. Gradually his focus shifted to the archaeology of Roman Britain and to Anglo-Saxon cemeteries. Although much of Wright's research has been completely superseded, his work is still considered worth consulting, as he collected material not readily available elsewhere. This two-volume 1851 publication is testimony to Wright's interest in folklore, sorcery and legend. In Volume 2, he maintains a broad perspective while surveying instances of witchcraft in the seventeenth century. Wright writes about such famous cases as the Earl of Somerset, the Ursuline nuns of Loudun, and the Mohra witches in Sweden, to whom the Devil appeared with a red beard and a high-crowned hat.
Table of Contents
- 18. Adventures of Doctor Torralva
- 19. Trial of the Earl and Countess of Somerset
- 20. La marechale d'Ancre
- 21. Louis Gaufridi
- 22. The Ursulines of Loudun
- 23. The Lancashire witches
- 24. Witchcraft in England during the earlier part of the seventeenth century
- 25. Witchcraft under the Commonwealth. Matthew Hopkins the Witch-finder
- 26. Witchcraft in Germany, in the earlier part of the seventeenth-century
- 27. The witches of Scotland under King James after his accession to the English throne
- 28. Confessions of Isobel Gowdie
- 29. The witches of Mohra in Sweden
- 30. Sir Matthew Hale and Chief Justice Holt
- 31. The doings of Satan in New England
- 32. Conclusion.
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