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Reporting from: https://exhibits.library.cornell.edu/witchcraft/feature/cauldrons-and-flight

Cauldrons and Flight

The witch mania of the Late Middle Ages spread through communities in two dimensions—it was experienced through real accusations, trials, and executions, and it was consumed visually, through illustrated books, pamphlets, and broadsheets. Printed imagery gripped the public imagination and helped shape popular perceptions of witch attributes, likely reinforcing testimonies that helped condemn the accused. Two of the earliest and most persistent visual markers of witches were the cauldron used to brew up toxic potions and the ability to fly. These two representations served as critical links between the physical harm done by village witches and the physical deviance of demonic witches. Images of women gathered around a cauldron became ubiquitous shorthand for witchcraft, associated with death, infanticide, and storm raising. A witch riding through the air became an established symbol for witchcraft in the 16th century. Witches flew with the aid of forked cooking sticks, brooms, or animals—often goats that represented the devil.


The Ants
Johann Geiler von Kaysersberg. Die Emeis (The Ants). Strasbourg, 1517.
The Devil's Hoodwink
Paulus Frisius. Dess Teuffels Nebelkappen (The Devil's Hoodwink). Gedruckt zu Franckfurt am Meyn, 1583.
Concerning Witches and Fortunetellers
Ulrich Molitor, De Lamiis et Phitonicis Mulieribus (Concerning Witches and Fortunetellers). Strasburg, not before 10 Jan. 1489.
German translation of Dissertatio de crimine magiae, On the Crime of Magic
Christian Thomasius. Kurtze Lehr-sätze von dem Laster der Zauberey (German translation of Dissertatio de crimine magiae, On the Crime of Magic), 1712.
German translation of The Displaying of Supposed Witchcraft
John Webster. Untersuchung der vermeinten und so genannten Hexereyen (German translation of The Displaying of Supposed Witchcraft). Halle, im Magdeburgischen, 1719.
Library of Magical Practices and Writings
Eberhard David Hauber. Bibliotheca Acta et Scripta Magica (Library of Magical Practices and Writings). Lemgo, v. 3, 1741.
Eleonora Giorgi in Mia moglie è una strega
Eleonora Giorgi in Mia moglie è una strega (1980, Italy, directed by Franco Castellano (as Castellano) and Giuseppe Moccia (as Pipolo)). A remake of I Married a Witch.
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