Medieval Sourcebook: 
Witchcraft Documents [15th Century]
 
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The really intense period of persecution of witches did not come  until the 
late 16th and 17th centuries. The basic doctrines of the later  witchcraze were 
laid down in documents of the later medieval period. These  documents built 
on longstanding folk beliefs which were put in vaguely  academic dress.  
There has been much recent discussion of whether witches actually  existed. 
For a long period the whole discussion was seen as a mirror of  psychological 
anxieties. Some recent authors - notably Carlo Ginzberg -  however, have argued 
that there were indeed groups of people who regarded  themselves as witches. 
This whole issue is still under discussion.  
Real or not, witches and witchcraft, were very real phenomena to the  writers 
of the fifteenth century and later. Their writing tell us much  about their 
thought worlds, and also their attitudes towards women. There  can be no doubt 
that, whether of not there were real groups of witches,  many women and a few 
men, suffered intense persecution and death as a  result of intolerance. As 
Arthur Miller showed in his play The  Crucible, set in Massachusetts at the 
time 
of the Salem witch trials  but about McCarthyism, irrational prejudice and 
state action based on  such, is hardly a medieval, or even a religious, 
phenomenon.  
The three documents below include the Papal Bull of 1484, in which the  pope 
provided his blessing and encouragement to witchhunting; an account  of some 
beliefs about witches; and an extract from the Hammer of Witches  describing 
the process of examination and trial. If the twists and turns  to produce a 
confession were not so tragic, they would constitute humor  worthy of Kafka.  
Innocent VIII: BULL Summis desiderantes, Dec. 5th,  1484
Bullarium Romanum (Taurinensis editio), sub, anno 1484. The  Bull is also 
printed in full at the head of the Malleus maleficarum.  
Innocent, bishop, servant of the servants of God, Ad futuram rei  memoriam  
Desiring with supreme ardor, as pastoral solicitude requires, that the  
catholic faith in our days everywhere grow and flourish as much as  possible, 
and 
that all heretical depravity be put far from the territories  of the faithful, 
we freely declare and anew decree this by which our pious  desire may be 
fulfilled, and, all errors being rooted out by our toil as  with the hoe of a 
wise 
laborer, zeal and devotion to this faith may take  deeper hold on the hearts 
of the faithful themselves.  
It has recently come to our ears, not without great pain to us, that in  some 
parts of upper Germany, as well as in the provinces, cities,  territories, 
regions, and dioceses of Mainz, Ko1n, Trier, Salzburg, and  Bremen, many 
persons 
of both sexes, heedless of their own salvation and  forsaking the catholic 
faith, give themselves over to devils male and  female, and by their 
incantations, charms, and conjurings, and by other  abominable superstitions 
and 
sortileges, offences, crimes, and misdeeds,  ruin and cause to perish the 
offspring of 
women, the foal of animals, the  products of the earth, the grapes of vines, 
and the fruits of trees, as  well as men and women, cattle and flocks and 
herds and animals of every  kind, vineyards also and orchards, meadows, 
pastures, 
harvests, grains and  other fruits of the earth; that they afflict and torture 
with dire pains  and anguish, both internal and external, these men, women, 
cattle, flocks,  herds, and animals, and hinder men from begetting and women 
from  conceiving, and prevent all consummation of marriage; that, moreover, 
they 
 deny with sacrilegious lips the faith they . received in holy baptism; and  
that, at the instigation of the enemy of mankind, they do not fear to  commit 
and perpetrate many other abominable offences and crimes, at the  risk of 
their own souls, to the insult of the divine majesty and to the  pernicious 
example and scandal of multitudes. And, although our beloved  sons Henricus 
Institoris and Jacobus Sprenger, of the order of Friars  Preachers, professors 
of 
theology, have been and still are deputed by our  apostolic letters as 
inquisitors 
of heretical pravity, the former in the  aforesaid parts of upper Germany, 
including the provinces, cities,  territories, dioceses, and other places as 
above, and the latter  throughout certain parts of the course of the Rhine; 
nevertheless certain  of the clergy and of the laity of those parts, seeking to 
be 
wise above  what is fitting, because in the said letter of deputation the 
aforesaid  provinces, cities, dioceses, territories, and other places, and the  
persons and offences in question were not individually and specifically  named, 
do not blush obstinately to assert that these are not at all  included in the 
said parts and that therefore it is illicit for the  aforesaid inquisitors to 
exercise their office of inquisition in the  provinces, cities, dioceses, 
territories, and other places aforesaid, and  that they ought not to be 
permitted 
to proceed to the punishment,  imprisonment, and correction of the aforesaid 
persons for the offences and  crimes above named. Wherefore in the provinces, 
cities, dioceses  territories, and places aforesaid such offences and crimes, 
not without  evident damage to their souls and risk of eternal salvation, go  
unpunished.  
We therefore, desiring, as is our duty, to remove all impediments by  which 
in any way the said inquisitors are hindered in the exercise of  their office, 
and to prevent the taint of heretical pravity and of other  like evils from 
spreading their infection to the ruin of others who are  innocent, the zeal of 
religion especially impelling us, in order that the  provinces, cities, 
dioceses, territories, and places aforesaid in the said  parts of upper Germany 
may 
not be deprived of the office of inquisition  which is their due, do hereby 
decree, by virtue of our apostolic  authority, that it shall be permitted to 
the 
said inquisitors in these  regions to exercise their office of inquisition and 
to proceed to the  correction, imprisonment, and punishment of the aforesaid 
persons for  their said offences and crimes, in all respects and altogether 
precisely  as if the provinces, cities, territories, places, persons, and 
offences  aforesaid were expressly named in the said letter. And, for the 
greater  
sureness, extending the said letter and deputation to the provinces,  cities, 
dioceses, territories, places, persons, and crimes aforesaid, we  grant to the 
said inquisitors that they or either of them joining with  them our beloved 
son Johannes Gremper, cleric of the diocese of  Coonstance, master of arts, 
their present notary, or any other notary  public who by them or by either of 
them 
shall have been temporarily  delegated in the provinces, cities, dioceses, 
territories, and places  aforesaid, may exercise against all persons, of 
whatsoever condition and  rank, the said office of inquisition, correcting, 
imprisoning, punishing  and chastising, according to their deserts, those 
persons whom 
they shall  find guilty as aforesaid.  
And they shall also have full and entire liberty to propound and preach  to 
the faithful word of God, as often as it shall seem to them fitting and  
proper, in each and all of the parosh churches in the said provinces, and  to 
do all 
things necessary and suitable under the aforesaid circumstances,  and 
likewise freely and fully to carry them out.  
Johannes Nider, the ANT HILL, circa 1437
Nider, Formicarius, ed.  of Augsburg, ca. 1476Lib. V. cap. 3  
This is one of the earliest books which thows light on the methods  of 
persecution. Written by the Dominican scholar Johannes Nider, about  1436, the 
work 
consists of a dialogue between a theologian and a doubter  on a variety of 
topics  
I will relate to you some examples, which I have gained in part from  the 
teachers of our faculty, in part from the experience of a certain  upright 
secular judge, worthy of all faith, who from the torture and  confession of 
witches 
and from his experiences in public and private has  learned many things of 
this sort-a man with whom I have often discussed  this subject broadly and 
deeply-to wit, Peter, a citizen of Bern, in the  diocese of Lausanne, [Note: 
this is 
Peter of Gruyeres, Bernese castellan  1392-1406] who has burned many witches 
of both sexes, and has driven  others out of the territory of the Bernese. I 
have moreover conferred with  one Benedict, a monk of the Benedictine order, 
who, although now a very  devout cleric in a reformed monastery at Vienna, was 
a 
decade ago, while  still in the world, a necromancer, juggler, buffoon, and 
strolling player,  well-known as an expert among the secular nobility. I have 
likewise heard  certain of the following things from the Inquisitor of 
Heretical Pravity  [note: this was the official title of the represenative of 
the 
Inquistion]  at Autun, who was a devoted reformer of our order in the convent 
at 
Lyons,  and has convicted many of witchcraft in the diocese of Autun.  
The same procedure was more clearly described by another young man,  arrested 
and burned as a witch, although as I believe, truly, penitent,  who had 
earlier, together with his wife, a witch invincible to persuasion,  escaped the 
clutches of the aforesaid judge, Peter. The aforesaid youth,  being again 
indicted at Bern, with his wife, and placed in a different  prison from hers, 
declared: "If I can obtain absolution for my sins, I  will freely lay bare all 
I know 
about witchcraft, for I see that I have  death to expect." And when he had 
been assured by the scholars that, if he  should truly repent, he would 
certainly be able to gain absolution for his  sins, then he gladly offered 
himself to 
death, and disclosed the methods  of the primeval infection.  
The ceremony, he said, of my seduction was as follows: First, on a  Sunday, 
before the holy water is consecrated, the future disciple with his  masters 
must go into the church, and there in their presence must renounce  Christ and 
his faith, baptism, and the church universal. Then he must do  homage to the 
magisterulus, that is, to the little master (for so, and not  otherwise, they 
call the Devil). Afterward he drinks from the aforesaid  flask: and, this done, 
he forthwith feels himself to conceive and hold  within himself an image of our 
art and the chief rites of this sect. After  this fashion was I seduced; and 
my wife also, whom I believe of so great  pertinacity that she will endure the 
flames rather than confess the least  whit of the truth; but, alas, we are 
both guilty. What the young man had  said was found in all respects the truth. 
For, after confession, the young  man was seen to die in great contrition. His 
wife, however, though  convicted by the testimony of witnesses, would not 
confess the truth even  under the torture or in death; but when the fire was 
prepared for her by  the executioner, uttered in most evil words a curse upon 
him, 
and so was  burned.  
Extracts from THE HAMMER OF WITCHES [Malleus maleficarum],  1486
Even with the papal bull the German inquisitors found their  preparation 
incomplete. Soon after their return from Rome they set about  compiling a 
handbook 
- an exposition of witchcraft and a code of procedure  for detection and 
punishment of witches. Completed in 1486, it was called  the Hammer of Witches. 
 
The method of beginning an examination by torture is as follows: First,  the 
jailers prepare the implements of torture, then they strip the  prisoner (if 
it be a woman, she has already been stripped by other women,  upright and of 
good report). This stripping is lest some means of  witchcraft may have been 
sewed into the clothing-such as often, taught by  the Devil, they prepare from 
the bodies of unbaptized infants, [murdered]  that they may forfeit salvation. 
And when the implements of torture have  been prepared, the judge, both in 
person and through other good men  zealous in the faith, tries to persuade the 
prisoner to confess the truth  freely; but, if he will not confess, he bid 
attendants make the prisoner  fast to the strappado or some other implement of 
torture. The attendants  obey forthwith, yet with feigned agitation. Then, at 
the 
prayer of some of  those present, the prisoner is loosed again and is taken 
aside and once  more persuaded to confess, being led to believe that he will in 
that case  not be put to death.  
Here it may be asked whether the judge, in the case of a prisoner much  
defamed, convicted both by witnesses and by proofs, nothing being lacking  but 
his 
own confession, can properly lead him to hope that his life will  be spared 
when, even if he confess his crime, he will be punished with  death.  
It must be answered that opinions vary. Some hold that even a witch of  ill 
repute, against whom the evidence justifies violent suspicion, and  who, as a 
ringleader of the witches, is accounted very dangerous, may be  assured her 
life, and condemned instead to perpetual imprisonment on bread  and water, in 
case she "I give sure and convincing testimony against other  witches; yet this 
penalty of perpetual imprisonment must not be announced  to her, but only that 
her life will be spared, and that she will be  punished in some other fashion, 
perhaps by exile. And doubtless such  notorious witches, especially those who 
prepare witch-potions or who by  magical methods cure those bewitched, would 
be peculiarly suited to be  thus preserved, in order to aid the bewitched or 
to accuse other witches,  were it not that their accusations cannot be trusted, 
since the Devil is a  liar, unless confirmed by proofs and witnesses.  
Others hold, as to this point, that for a time the promise made to the  witch 
sentenced to imprisonment is to be kept, but that after a time she  should be 
burned.  
A third view is, that the judge may safely promise witches to spare  their 
lives, if only he will later excuse himself from pronouncing the  sentence and 
will let another do this in his place....  
But if, neither by threats nor by promises such as these, the witch can  be 
induced to speak the truth, then thejailers must carry out the  sentence, and 
torture the prisoner according to the accepted methods, with  more or less of 
severity as the delinquent's crime may demand. And, while  he is being 
tortured, he must be questioned on the articles of accusation,  and this 
frequently 
and persistently, beginning with the lighter  charges-for he will more readily 
confess the lighter than the heavier.  And, while this is being done, the 
notary must write down everything in  his record of the trial - how the 
prisoner is 
tortured, on what points he  is questioned and how he answers.  
And note that, if he confesses under the torture, he must afterward be  
conducted to another place, that he may confirm it and certify that it was  not 
due 
alone to the force of the torture.  
But, if the prisoner will not confess the truth satisfactorily, other  sorts 
of tortures must be placed before him, with the statement that  unless he will 
confess the truth, he must endure these also. But, if not  even thus he can 
be brought into terror and to the truth, then the next  day or the next but one 
is to be set for a continuation of the tortures -  not a repetition, for it 
must not be repeated unless new evidences  produced.  
The judge must then address to the prisoners the following sentence:  We, the 
judge, etc., do assign to you, such and such a day for the  continuation of 
the tortures, that from your own mouth the truth may be  heard, and that the 
whole may be recorded by the notary.  
And during the interval, before the day assigned, the judge, in person  or 
through approved men, must in the manner above described try to  persuade the 
prisoner to confess, promising her (if there is aught to be  gained by this 
promise) that her life shall be spared.  
The judge shall see to it, moreover, that throughout this interval  guards 
are constantly with the prisoner, so that she may not be I alone;  because she 
will be visited by the De and tempted into suicide.  
University of Pennsylvania. Dept. of History: Translations and  Reprints from 
the Original Sources of European history, published for  the Dept. of History 
of the University of Pennsylvania., Philadelphia,  University of Pennsylvania 
Press [1897?-1907?]. Vol III:4, pp, 7-10 (Papal  Bull), 6-7 (Nider), 10-13 
(Hammer)  
 
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This text is part of the _Internet Medieval Source  Book_ 
(http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/sbook.html) . The Sourcebook is a collection of 
public domain and 
 copy-permitted texts related to medieval and Byzantine history.  
Unless otherwise indicated the specific electronic form of the document  is 
copyright. Permission is granted for electronic copying, distribution  in print 
form for educational purposes and personal use. If you do  reduplicate the 
document, indicate the source. No permission is granted  for commercial use.  
(c)Paul Halsall Mar 1996 
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