European Witch Hunts

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European Witch Hunts

Witch hunts blazed across Europe over the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries not just killing innumerable innocent people, but stripping women of much of the power they had once held, and changing society's perceptions of women all together. The economic hardships, religious rivalries, and troubled politics of the time made accusing your neighbors of witchcraft convenient. Where there was war and poverty, or merely bad luck, peasants would assume witchcraft and rush to blame an old, defenseless woman in trials which involved unbelievable cruelty and horrible sadism. As religion and the Catholic Church began to complement and perpetuate the increasing hysteria, European society as a whole could do nothing but watch as the face of Europe and the role of women were altered permanently.

Although the belief in witches predates Christianity, and myths were prevalent throughout Europe, not until the fifteenth century, did witch hunts become endemic, and nearly epidemic. Once religion became involved, the fear of witches increased dramatically and the extreme notions of the devil's powers merely furthered the witch hunts. With the Church authorizing the Inquisition to investigate witchcraft, the popular concept of witches as evil sorcerers expanded to include allegiances with the Devil, and a distinctly evil, as opposed to mystical, character. It has been speculated that this religiously inspired genocide beginning in the fifteenth century was motivated from the Church's desire to attain a complete religious monopoly, and create scapegoats for spoiled crops, dead livestock, and death in general which could not be explained as part of God's plan. If a witch were to blame, peasants had a means of fighting b...

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...re had to be kept in line by their male keepers. Both by law and by custom, women were no longer considered people, rather they were seen as property. Only a man could keep a woman in accordance with what is right and what is holy, for without that control and without female subservience, there was always the chance for evil, for the Devil, and for witchcraft.

Although the witch hunts can hardly be seen as the reason for the subservient role of women in society which followed the fifteenth century, their impact is clear. The proactive role of the Church especially gave credence to the public's suspicions and fears about the supernatural and about women practicing witchcraft. In a time when religion was the basis of life and the root of knowledge, one could not help but be swept up by even extreme beliefs, the residual effects of which can still be felt today.

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