Religion and the Decline of MagicReligion & the Decline of Magic is Keith Thomas's classic history of the magical beliefs held by people on every level of English society in the 16th and 17th centuries and how these beliefs were a part of the religious and scientific assumptions of the time. It is not only a major historical and religious work, but a thoroughly enjoyable book filled with fascinating facts and original insights into an area of human nature that remains controversial today- the belief in the supernatural that still continues in the modern world. |
From inside the book
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Page 208
... Cunning men could identify ordinary maladies and prescribe medicine for them.1 They could draw upon the extensive and sometimes genuine herb - lore which had been accumulated over the centuries . Their sympathetic cures kept the wound ...
... Cunning men could identify ordinary maladies and prescribe medicine for them.1 They could draw upon the extensive and sometimes genuine herb - lore which had been accumulated over the centuries . Their sympathetic cures kept the wound ...
Page 247
... cunning folk have been identified , of whom at least forty - one practised within the county boundary . In Elizabethan Essex no one lived more than ten miles from a known cunning man . If allow- ance is made for the numerous wizards who ...
... cunning folk have been identified , of whom at least forty - one practised within the county boundary . In Elizabethan Essex no one lived more than ten miles from a known cunning man . If allow- ance is made for the numerous wizards who ...
Page 548
... cunning man , astrologer , or wise woman - who was believed to possess the magical skill necessary to identify the source of misfortune . The client would go to the local wizard , describe his symptoms and invite a diagnosis . After ...
... cunning man , astrologer , or wise woman - who was believed to possess the magical skill necessary to identify the source of misfortune . The client would go to the local wizard , describe his symptoms and invite a diagnosis . After ...
Contents
The Environment | 3 |
The Magic of the Medieval Church | 43 |
The Impact of the Reformation | 51 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
2nd edn accused almanac Archaeol Ashm Ashmole astrological Aubrey belief Bishop Bodl Cambridge Catholic chap charms Christian Church claimed clergy clients confessed conjuration contemporary courts cunning cunning folk cure curse death declared Devil Diary Discourse Discoverie disease divine doctrine ecclesiastical Elizabeth Elizabethan England English Essex evil Ewen example explain fairies faith Folk-Lore G. G. Coulton Gadbury Gentilisme ghosts God's healing Henry History holy intellectual John John Aubrey John Dee John Gadbury Journ judicial astrology King Kittredge Lilly Lollards London magic maleficent Matthew Hopkins medicine medieval natural Oxford parish persons physicians plague popular practice prayer predictions prognostication prophecies prophetic prosecution Protestant Puritan records Reformation Reginald Scot reign religion religious Richard ritual Robert Royal scepticism Science Scot seventeenth century Simon Forman social society sorcery spirits supernatural Thomas thought trans Treatise Tudor William William Lilly William Perkins witch-beliefs witchcraft witches wizard woman