Cambridge Medieval Textbooks MAGIC IN THE MIDDLE AGES , This textbook deals with magic, both natural and demonic, within the broad context of medieval culture. Covering the years c. 500 to 1500, with a chapter on antiquity, it investigates the way magic relates to the many other cultural forms of the time, such as religion and science, literature and art. The book begins with a full discussion of the social history of magic and of the ways in which magical beliefs borrowed from a diversity of cultures. Thereafter, within a wider study of the growth and development of the phenomenon, the author shows how magic served as a point of contact between the popular and elite classes, how the reality of magical beliefs is reflected in the fiction of medieval literature, and how the persecution of magic and witchcraft led to changes in the law. The chapter on necromancy is the most original, based largely on unpublished manu scripts and arguing for a new interpretation of the material. Adopting an interdisciplinary approach, Professor Kieckhefer has taken magic from its cultural isolation and placed it firmly at the cross roads of medieval culture, as a focal point for our understanding of many other aspects of medieval history. Cambridge Medieval Textbooks This is a new series of specially commissioned textbooks for teachers and students, designed to complement the monograph series 'Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought' by providing introductions to a range of topics in medieval history. The series will combine both chronological and thematic approaches, and .will deal equally with British and European topics. All volumes in the series will be published in hard covers and in paperback. Already published Germany in the High Middle Ages c. 1050-1200 HORST FUHRMANN Translated by Timothy Reuter The Hundred Years War: England and France at War c. 1300-c. 1450 CHRISTOPHER ALLMAND Standards· of Living in the Later Middle Ages: Social Change in England, c. 1200-1520 CHRISTOPHER DYER Magic in the Middle Ages RICHARD KIECKHEFER The Struggle for Power in Medieval Italy: Structures of Political Rule GIOVANNI T ABACCO Translated by-Rosalind Brown Jensen Other titles are in preparation MAGIC IN THE MIDDLE AGES RICHARD KIECKHEFER Professor of the History and Literature of Religions Northwestern University TIt!! rilltt of lit!! Uni'~l!r.Ji'y of Camb,idgl' 10 print Qnd ull 0/1 mtI""t'r of booh M'OS ,r"ftlt'd by Hl!n,y VIII in 1534. TIft' Un;",sil)' Itos print!''' o"d puM$lted conlinllOUJly si"cl.' /584 . . : CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge New York Port Chester Melbourne Sydney Published by the Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge The Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge CB2 IRP 40 West 20th Street, New York, NY IOOII, USA 10 Stamford Road, Oakleigh, Melbourne 3166, Australia ©Cambridge University Press 1990 First published 1989 ° Printed in Great Britain at the University Press, Cambridge British Library cataloguing in publication data Kieckhefer, Richard Magic in the Middle Ages. - (Cambridge medieval textbooks) 1. Europe. M~gic, history 1. Title 133·4'3'094 Library of Congress cataloguing in publication data Kieckhefer, Richard. Magic in the Middle Ages/Richard Kieckhefer. p. em. - (Cambridge medieval textbooks). Bibliography. Includes index. ISBN 0 521 30941 7·- ISBN 0 521 31202 7 (pbk.) 1. Magic - Europe - History. 1. Title. u. Series. BFI593-K53 1989 IJ3'.094'0902--dc20 89-9752 CIP ISBN o 521 30941 7 hard covers ISBN o 521 31202 7 paperback SE CONTENTS List of illustrations page vii Preface IX INTRODUCTION: MAGIC AS A CROSSROADS 1 Two case studies 2 Definitions of magic 8 Plan for this book 17 2 THE CLASSICAL INHERIT ANCE 19 Scientific and philosophical literature 21 Fictional literature 29 The Bible and biblical apocrypha 33 Magic, early Christianity, and the Graeco-Roman world 36 3 THE TWILIGHT OF PAGANISM: MAGIC IN NORSE AND IRISH CUL TURE 43 Conversion and pagan survivals 44 Runic inscriptions 47 The Norse sagas 48 Irish literature 53 4 THE COMMON TRADITION OF MEDIEV AL MAGIC 56 Practitioners of magic: healers and diviners 57 Medical magic: herbs and animals 64 v VI Contents Charms: prayers, blessings, and adjurations 69 Protective amulets and talismans 75 Sorcery: the misuse of medical and protective magic 80 Divination and popular astrology 85 The art of trickery 91 5 THE ROMANCE OF MAGIC IN COURTL Y CULTURE 95 Magicians at court 96 Magical objects: automatons and gems 100 Magic in the romances and related literature 105 6 ARABIC LEARNING AND THE OCCULT SCIENCES II6 The transformations of European intellectual life II7 The practice of astrology 120 Principles of astrology 125 Astral magic 131 Alchemy 133 The cult of secrecy and books of secrets 140 The Renaissance magus 144 7 NECROMANCY IN THE CLERICAL UNDERWORLD 151 The making of a clerical underworld 153 Formulas and rituals for conjuring spirits 156 The sources for necromancy 165 Necromancy in the exempla 172 8 PROHIBITION, CONDEMNATION, AND PROSECUTION 176 Legal prohibition 177 Moral and theological condemnation 181 Patterns of prosecution 187 The rise of the witch trials 194 Conclusion 200 Further reading 202 Index 214 ILLUSTRATIONS I. British Library, MS Cotton Tiberius A.VII., foJ. 70r. Page II Group of women and demons. From John Lydgate, The Pilgrimage of the Life of Man, fifteenth-century manuscript. r 2. British Library, MS Harley 5294, foJ. 43 . Dog being 14 used to extract mandrake. From a twelfth-century manuscript with herbal ascribed to Dioscorides. 3a. British Museum, magical gem no. G241, obverse side. 23 3b. British Museum, magical gem no. G23 I, obverse side. 23 4· Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris, MS fr. 598, foJ. 54v. 30 Circe with Odysseus and companions, from a fifteenth-century manuscript. 5· Lunds Universitets Historiska Museum. Lindholm 49 wand-amulet. Sixth-century, Swedish. 6. Trinity College, Cambridge, MS 0.2.48, foJ. 95r. 69 Christ and Mary, with herbs. From a fourteenth- century herbal, probably from the Low Countries. 7· Trinity College, Cambridge MS 0.2.48, fols. 76 r 54v-55 . Augustine recommending use of a herb to exorcise demons; the herb taking effect. 8. Bodleian Library, Oxford, MS Rawlinson 0.939, pt. 87 3, verso, right-hand side. Fourteenth-century chart for divination by thundef. 9· Niedersachsische Staats- und Universitatsbibliothek, 99 Gottingen, MS philos. 63, foJ.94r. Magical activities at a castle. From Conrad Kyeser, Bellifortis, fifteenth- century manuscript. Vll Vlll List of Illustrations loa British Museum, ring no. 895. Italian, fourteenth- 104 century. lOb. British Library, Additional MS 21,926, fol. I2f. King 104 Edward the Confessor giving a ring to a peasant, from a thirteenth-century manuscript. II. Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris, MS fT. . 122, fol. 137v. 110 Lancelot releasing captives from a magic dance, from a French manuscript of 1344. 12a. Bibliotheek der Rijksuniversiteit Leiden, MS 537, fol. 114 f 79 . Combat of Wigalois with Roaz the Enchanter, from a German manuscript of 1372. 12b. Furstliches Zentralarchiv, Furst Thurn und Taxis- 115 Schlossmuseum, Regensburg, Cod. perm. III, fol. f 135 . Virgil breaking a bottle containing demons, from a fourteenth-century German manuscript. f 13a. British Library, Oriental MS 5565, fol. 47V-48 . 120 Twelfth-century Muslim horoscope, in Arabic. 13b. British Library, MS Royal App. 85, fol. 2f. Twelfth- 121 century Western horoscope, in Latin. 14· British Library, Additional MS 10,302, fol. 37v. 137 Alchemist's laboratory. From Thomas Norton, The Ordinall of Alchimy, fifteenth-century manuscript. 15· Siena cathedral, Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus, in 145 an intaglio pavement by Giovanni di Stefano, fifteen th-century. 16. British Library, MS Sloane 3853, fol. 51 v. Magic 160 circle. Fifteenth-century manuscript. 17· British Library, MS Cotton Tiberius A.VII, fol. 42f. 173 The Pilgrim encountering a student of Necromancy. From a fifteenth-century manuscript of Lydgate, Pilgrimage of the Life of Man. 18. Staatliche Museen Preussischer Kulturbesitz, 178 Kupferstichkabinett, West Berlin, woodcut no. 183 (Schreiber no. 1870). (Photo: Jorg P. Anders.) A fifteenth-century warning against sorcery. 19· Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich, Cod. gall. 369, 189 fol. 337v. Burning of the Templars. PREFACE Some years ago I wrote a book about notions of witchcraft in late medieval Europe. My own greatest reservation about that book, after I had written it, was that it seemed artificial to discuss witchcraft in isolation from the broader context of magic in general. I thus accepted the invitation to write this present book partly as an opportunity to do what I did not do earlier: examine the full range of medieval magical beliefs and practices. In the process of research and writing I have come to realize more fully the complexity of this topic, and the need to see each ofi ts parts in the light of the whole. I have written for an undergraduate audience, although I hope others as well may find the book useful. In attempting to do a rounded survey I have had to synthesize a wealth of secondary literature in some areas, while for other topics there is such a dearth of usable material that I have turned mainly to manuscripts. The result is in some ways a new interpret ation. I have tried, first of all, to rethink the fundamental distinction between demonic magic and natural magic. Secondly, I have tried to locate the cultural setting of the magicians (as members of various social groups) and of magic (as a cultural phenomenon related to religion and science). Especially in my presentation of necromancy I have had to tread on uncharted ground. Nonetheless, I have of course stood on the shoulders ofLynn Thorn dike and other giants. While.} have provided only a minumum of notes, I trust that the notes and bibliography taken together will sufficiently indicate my indebtedness to these scholars. My personal debts of gratitude are many. My colleague Robert Lerner and my wife and colleague Barbara Newman read the book as it pro- IX
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