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Wise Wives and Warlocks - A rogues' gallery of East Lothian witchcraft (Paperback)
Loot Price: R465
Discovery Miles 4 650
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Wise Wives and Warlocks - A rogues' gallery of East Lothian witchcraft (Paperback)
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Loot Price R465
Discovery Miles 4 650
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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East Lothian is well known as the setting for the notorious "North
Berwick" witchcraft outbreak, which is so famous as to have come to
dominate all consideration of Scottish witchcraft. This is a pity,
as there is much about "North Berwick" which is not typical of
Scottish witchcraft, while there is a vast amount of other
interesting material which up to now has been virtually ignored.
"Wise wives and warlocks" takes a less academic approach than
"Goodnight my servants all" (Grimsay Press, 2008)-- which tries to
find every reference on record relating to witchcraft and other
kindred matters in East Lothian -- and offers a close look at some
of the more interesting characters involved. Until recently, the
politically correct view of Scottish witchcraft was more or less
that it was all nonsense, and that "witches" were poor innocent
souls unjustly hounded to a horrible death by tyrannical misogynist
religious fanatics. While there is a limited amount of truth in
this view, we need not doubt for a moment that there were
substantial numbers of people in 17th Century Scotland making a
living as healers, charmers, and practitioners of traditional
magic. Some of these worthies were not above using their "powers"
to cause harm and mischief, and some were seriously unpleasant
people habitually extracting money and gifts with threats and
menaces. The question of diabolic witchcraft is more problematic.
The Devil was originally a foreign import into the world of
traditional Scottish magic, and while we cannot absolutely rule out
the possibility of "witch clubs" with a "devil" as a sort of master
of ceremonies, it seems likely that most of the witchcraft
confessions involving the Devil were exercises in telling
interrogators what they wanted to hear. We should perhaps make an
effort to climb down from our lofty modern superiority, and try to
see magic and witchcraft through 17th Century eyes. Our ancestors
were not being wilfully stupid or perverse. Magic and witchcraft
were realities which pervaded everyday life, and fitted logically
into the scheme of things. Many of our cherished 21st Century
notions may seem just as bizarre three hundred years into the
future.
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