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Martin Delrio - Demonology and Scholarship in the Counter-Reformation (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,265
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Martin Delrio - Demonology and Scholarship in the Counter-Reformation (Hardcover)
Series: British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship Monographs
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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If the Jesuit Martin Delrio (1551-1608) is remembered at all today,
it is for his Disquisitiones magicae (1599-1600), a voluminous tome
on witchcraft and superstition which was reprinted numerous times
until 1755. The present volume recovers the lost world of Delrio's
wider scholarship. Delrio emerges here as a figure of considerable
interest not only to historians of witchcraft but to the broader
fields of early modern cultural, religious and intellectual history
as well. As the editor of classical texts, notably Senecan tragedy,
Delrio had a number of important philological achievements to his
name. A friend of the Flemish philosopher Justus Lipsius
(1547-1606) and an enemy of the Huguenot scholar Joseph Scaliger
(1540-1609), he played an important part in the Republic of Letters
and the confessional polemics of his day. Delrio's publications
after his admission to the Society of Jesus (the Disquisitiones
included) marked a significant contribution to the intellectual
culture of the Counter-Reformation. Catholic contemporaries
accordingly rated him highly, but later generations proved less
kind. As attitudes towards witchcraft changed, the context in which
the Disquisitiones first emerged disappeared from view and its
author became a byword for credulity and cruelty. Recovering this
background throws important new light on a period in history when
the worlds of humanism and Catholic Reform collided. In an
important chapter, the book demonstrates that demonology, in
Delrio's hands, was a textual science, an insight that sheds new
light on the way witchcraft was believed in. At the same time, the
book also develops a wider argument about the significance of
Delrio's writings, arguing that the Counter-Reformation can also be
seen as a textual project and Delrio's contribution to it as the
product of a mindset forged in its fragile borderlands.
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