Heinrich Kramer and Jacob Sprenger finished the Malleus Maleficarum in 1486. It was published in 1487. Kramer and Sprenger were both members of the Dominican Order and they were both Inquisitors for the Catholic Church. Their book was intended to be a guideline for other Inquisitors. It was meant to aid them in detecting witches, tell them which rules to follow when questioning them and what punishment should be eked out to those who were uncooperative or found guilty.
The first part of the Malleus Maleficarum debates every argument against the reality of witchcraft. The use of the word heretical is of note. They believed that those who did not believe in witchcraft were heretics. The second and third parts of the Malleus Maleficarum outline what to look for in the search for witches, information extraction and punishment.
It is interesting to note the criteria for being labeled a witch. Things like mental illness, unusual features, living conditions and other such trivial things were believed to be proof of witchcraft. If you were to read the Malleus Maleficarum, you would be likely to find something that could have led to your torture, had you lived in those dark times. Simply being accused of it by an enemy would have sufficed. It is also interesting to note that many of the things these Inquisitors said witches do were most likely made up completely. It makes one wonder what kind of men invented this book. It is entirely fictitious, sadistically so, in many ways.
The Malleus Maleficarum does talk about torture more than an empathetic person would care to see. However, it does not specifically outline the torture methods that were used during the Inquisition. Instead, it refers Inquisitors to Canonical Law, which did grant them the right to use some of the most despicable forms of torture ever devised by humankind.
Common belief holds that the Malleus Maleficarum was banned just four years after it was written. However, it does not seem to appear on the first official list of banned books by the Catholic Church. Otherwise known as the "Pauline Index," Pope Paul IV's list did not include the Malleus Maleficarum. Still, it may have been banned, but it was not out of print or use. It was printed numerous times in the 16th and 17th century. It was also used extensively by both the Catholics and Protestants.
Sources
Lovelace, Wicasta, Introduction to Online Edition, retrieved 8/30/10, malleusmaleficarum.org
Published by Shelly Barclay
Shelly Barclay writes on a variety of topics from animal facts to mysteries in history. Her main focus is military and political history. She is the Boston History Examiner, Military History Examiner and the... View profile
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10 Comments
Post a CommentMy comment on the history of religion is not referring just to the 1400s and 1500s, but present day abuse, such as forbidding use of condoms which causes suffering with disease and poverty, sexual abuse, marrying children to relatives, mutilation, and more. The barbarism of the Muslims is even more appalling to me. My problem is with religions, not just the Catholics.
Pauline, the church has long outgrown the excesses of the 1400 and 1500s! Not really fair to act like they still do it today. Not like the muslims who still practice midieval and barbaric punishments!
The people I babysat for as a teenager had a copy of this on their mantle! I used to really get into it!
"Mein Kampf" would be another interesting feature you could write about..! Evil is always in the hands of a few as they influence the many..
Very interesting article! Thanks for sharing!
The Catholic Church and other churches try hard to pretend they are humanitarian organizations. History of religion proves otherwise.
Scary isn't it. Just by having warts or a big nose, you could be deemed a witch. I wonder if a lot of the traits were added so that they could entrap specific people.
Yeah and with an electronic witch detector you don't even have to check for warts.
That is insane to use such a book! I mean, especially now when you can get a decent electronic witch detector at your local Walmart for a reasonable price.
Both of those guys should have suffered the same fate.