About This Book
This work surveys historical beliefs in magic and witchcraft, tracing how religious instincts became inverted into practices regarded as maleficent. It outlines theories and sources of superstition from antiquity through medieval monasticism, and considers how pagan rites and popular faiths were transformed into accusations and prosecutions. The narrative examines phenomena such as confessions, spectral illusions, coincidences in evidence, and the legal processes that produced trials, tortures, and executions, with attention to regional variations and reforming responses. Throughout, the emphasis is on understanding superstition as a corruption of religious feeling that generated lasting social, legal, and intellectual consequences while intersecting with emerging scientific ideas.





