• Salem (and other) Witch-Hunts Blamed On - "MSM"

    From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 18 22:30:14 2024
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, soc.culture, alt.history
    XPost: alt.politics.usa

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-13975159/Scientists-discover-document-Salem-Witch-trials-Massachusetts.html

    Sinister source of the Salem Witch trials is revealed on the
    eve of Halloween

    A new study discovered that the invention of the printing press
    in the 15th century - which drastically increased the spread
    of information - led to the proliferation of a book that
    contained a detailed explanation of 'demonology.'

    The widely-printed book, Malleus Maleficarum - which translates
    to the Hammer of Evil-Doers - depicted witchcraft as a
    'conspiratorial activity against godly society' rather than
    benign 'mischief by village sorceresses, pagans, or ignorant
    peasants.'

    This book also served as the first printed guide printed
    guide for witch-hunters.

    . . .

    Probably some truth to this assertion. The printing
    press created the MSM v0.2 ... and the witch books
    spread the paranoia widely (and, being print, were
    trusted). First the intellectuals, then partially
    spread down to the (seriously) ignorant peasants.

    The efforts and edicts of King James VI also played
    their part - lent official govt recognition and
    sanction to 'witch' affairs.

    (MSM v0.1 was scrolls, clay tablets & carvings)

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  • From Steve Hayes@21:1/5 to 186283@ud0s4.net on Sun Oct 20 04:47:49 2024
    XPost: soc.culture, alt.history, alt.politics.usa
    XPost: soc.history, alt.christnet.demonology

    On Fri, 18 Oct 2024 22:30:14 -0400, "186282@ud0s4.net"
    <186283@ud0s4.net> wrote:

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-13975159/Scientists-discover-document-Salem-Witch-trials-Massachusetts.html

    Sinister source of the Salem Witch trials is revealed on the
    eve of Halloween

    A new study discovered that the invention of the printing press
    in the 15th century - which drastically increased the spread
    of information - led to the proliferation of a book that
    contained a detailed explanation of 'demonology.'

    The widely-printed book, Malleus Maleficarum - which translates
    to the Hammer of Evil-Doers - depicted witchcraft as a
    'conspiratorial activity against godly society' rather than
    benign 'mischief by village sorceresses, pagans, or ignorant
    peasants.'

    This book also served as the first printed guide printed
    guide for witch-hunters.

    . . .

    Probably some truth to this assertion. The printing
    press created the MSM v0.2 ... and the witch books
    spread the paranoia widely (and, being print, were
    trusted). First the intellectuals, then partially
    spread down to the (seriously) ignorant peasants.

    The UK "Daily Mail" tends to try to sensationalise everything, and
    does to here by trying to present the influence of the publication of
    the "Malleus Malefeficorm" as a new discovery, whereas it is mentioned
    in just about every book I've read on the subject.

    What this research does show, however, is how the "witchcraft as a
    satanic conspiracy" meme "went viral".

    Forget all the "Eve of Hallowe'en" hype. It says little that is new
    about witchcraft or witch trials, but it says quite a lot that is new
    about memes and how they spread.

    Some quotations from earlier writers:

    Witchcraft trials.
    Source: Williams 1959:142.
    The 16th century witch trials ordered by the Malleus
    Maleficarum differed from earlier ones in that they did not
    punish false accusations. "The secular governments of
    centuries earlier had been wiser; they had penalized the talk
    as much as the act. The new effort did not do so; it
    encouraged the talk against the act."
    (that's from Charles Williams's book "Witchcraft" first published in
    the 1930s)

    Witch hunts of pagan origin.
    Source: Cohn 1975:147-149.
    Maleficium was the doing of harm by occult means, and it was
    an ancient custom for those who believed maleficium was being
    used against them or their kin to take personal retaliation.
    It was common among the Alemanni, the Lombards and the Saxons
    when they were conquered by Charlemagne towards the end of the
    eighth century. Death by burning continued to be regarded as a
    proper penalty.

    Witchcraft and magic in the Roman Empire.
    Source: Williams 1959:305.
    "Before Christendom began, magic, with its lower
    accompaniment of witchcraft, preoccupied the whole Roman
    Empire; we have forgotten the darkness out of which we came.
    It was as popular as it was perilous. It was certainly
    regarded by the authorities as a public danger, but, on the
    whole, action against it was taken only by private persons in



    --
    Steve Hayes from Tshwane, South Africa
    Web: http://www.khanya.org.za/stevesig.htm
    Blog: http://khanya.wordpress.com
    E-mail - see web page, or parse: shayes at dunelm full stop org full stop uk

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