Books > History > World history > 1500 to 1750
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The Last Witch Craze - John Aubrey, the Royal Society and the Witches (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R497
Discovery Miles 4 970
You Save: R110
(18%)
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The Last Witch Craze - John Aubrey, the Royal Society and the Witches (Hardcover)
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List price R607
Loot Price R497
Discovery Miles 4 970
You Save R110 (18%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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The seventeenth-century man of letters John Aubrey is remembered,
above all, for his great biographical work, Brief Lives. He also
wrote pioneering works dealing with education, geology, languages,
archaeology, history, place-name study and folklore. Aubrey was a
Fellow of the Royal Society. Other early members of the Royal
Society included Robert Boyle, the greatest scientist of his
generation and Henry More, one of England's leading philosophers.
Aubrey, Boyle and More promoted new thinking about the natural
world and championed the use of experimental science. They also
believed in demons and angels and the authenticity of witchcraft.
Aubrey recommended ways of countering witchcraft through horseshoe
magic and suggested that gifted schoolboys should be taught to
communicate with good spirits through the use of crystal balls.
Boyle publicly endorsed the reality of witchcraft based on a case
study from France. Henry More attempted to explain scientifically
how witches could leave their bodies behind them when attending
sabbat meetings. The Last Witch Craze tells the story of these men
and others who attempted to reconcile science and sorcery. Their
ideas were taken very seriously by others and provided an
intellectual justification for the last lethal witch craze in
Britain and America. Two fellows of the Royal Society - Joseph
Glanvill and James Long - actively participated in witch hunts. In
New England, those who persecuted the witches of Salem were fully
aware that several distinguished members of the Royal Society of
London were believers in the reality of witchcraft. The book also
reveals that John Aubrey had a dark secret. His magical notebook
survives in the archives of Oxford University. It makes clear that
Aubrey personally practised a form of black magic and used charms
to conjure up demons.
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