The European Witch-Craze of the 16th and 17th Centuries

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The European Witch-Craze of the 16th and 17th Centuries is a historical study by Hugh Trevor-Roper that analyzes the social, religious, and political factors behind the major witch hunts in early modern Europe.

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Predicate Object
instanceOf book
historical study
academicDiscipline history of religion
political history
social history
analyzes political factors behind witch hunts
religious factors behind witch hunts
social factors behind witch hunts
argues witch craze was linked to religious and political tensions of early modern Europe
witch hunts declined with changes in intellectual and religious climate
author Hugh Trevor-Roper NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin United Kingdom
examines intellectual context of witch beliefs
relationship between Counter-Reformation and witch hunts
relationship between Reformation and witch hunts
role of judicial institutions in witch trials
role of religious conflict in witch persecutions
role of state-building in witch persecutions
field European history
historiography of witchcraft
focusesOn early modern Europe
genre early modern European history
history
hasPerspectiveOn Catholic-Protestant conflicts
decline of witch trials
state centralization in early modern Europe
includedIn collections of essays by Hugh Trevor-Roper
influenced later scholarship on European witch hunts
language English
mainSubject political history
religious conflict
social history
witch hunts
witchcraft
notableFor emphasis on political and institutional context of witch trials
linking witch persecutions to confessional conflict
perspective revisionist interpretation of witch hunts
spatialCoverage Europe NERFINISHED
targetAudience historians
readers interested in witchcraft history
students of early modern Europe
temporalCoverage 16th century
17th century
workOf Hugh Trevor-Roper NERFINISHED

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Hugh Trevor-Roper notableWork The European Witch-Craze of the 16th and 17th Centuries