Magic in the middle ages

Richard Kieckhefer

Book - 2022

"This book will approach magic as a kind of crossroads where different pathways in medieval culture converge. First of all it is a point of intersection between religion and science. Demonic magic invokes evil spirits and rests upon a network of religious beliefs and practices, while natural magic exploits "occult" powers within nature and is essentially a branch of medieval science. Yet demonic and natural magic are not always as distinct in fact as they seem in principle. Even when magic is clearly nondemonic it sometimes mingles elements of religion and science: a magical cure, for example, may embody both herbal lore from folk medicine and phrases of prayer from Christian ritual. Secondly, magic is an area where popular c...ulture meets with learned culture. Popular notions of magic got taken up and interpreted by "intellectuals" - a term here used for those with philosophical or theological education - and their ideas about magic, demons, and kindred topics were in turn spread throughout the land by preachers. One of the most important tasks in cultural history is working out these lines of transmission. Thirdly, magic represents a particularly interesting crossroads between fiction and reality. The fictional literature of medieval Europe sometimes reflected the realities of medieval life, sometimes distorted them, sometimes provided escapist release from them, and sometimes held up ideals for reality to imitate. When this literature featured sorcerers, fairies, and other workers of magic, it may not have been meant or taken as totally realistic. Even so, the magic of medieval literature did resemble the magical practices of medieval life in ways that are difficult but interesting to disentangle"--

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Subjects
Published
Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Richard Kieckhefer (author)
Edition
Third edition
Item Description
Previous edition: 2014.
Physical Description
xiv, 289 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781108796897
9781108494717
  • 1. Introduction: Magic as a Crossroads
  • Two Case Studies
  • Definitions of Magic
  • The Magical Power of Words and of Imagination
  • Plan for this Book
  • 2. The Classical Inheritance
  • Evidence for Magic in Antiquity
  • Scientific and Philosophical Literature
  • Fictional Literature
  • The Bible and Biblical Apocrypha
  • Magic, Early Christianity, and the Graeco-Roman World
  • 3. The Twilight of Paganism: Magic in Norse and Irish Culture
  • Conversion and Pagan Survivals
  • Runic Inscriptions
  • The Norse Sagas
  • Irish Literature
  • 4. The Common Tradition of Medieval Magic
  • Practitioners of Magic: Healers and Diviners
  • Medical Magic: Herbs and Animals
  • Charms: Prayers, Blessings, and Adjurations
  • Protective Amulets and Talismans
  • Sorcery: The Misuse of Medical and Protective Magic
  • Divination and Popular Astrology
  • The Archaeology of Magic
  • The Art of Trickery
  • 5. The Romance of Magic in Courtly Culture
  • Magicians at Court
  • Magical Objects: Automatons and Gems
  • Magic in the Romances and Related Literature
  • 6. Arabic Learning and the Occult Sciences
  • The Transformations of European Intellectual Life
  • The Practice of Astrology
  • Principles of Astrology
  • Astral Magic
  • Alchemy
  • The Cult of Secrecy and Books of Secrets
  • The Renaissance Magus
  • 7. Invocation and Conjuration of Angels
  • Magic Involving Angels of the Heavens
  • Jewish Angel Magic
  • Angel Magic as an Aid in Learning
  • Angel Magic as a Means for Gaining a Vision of God
  • Angel Magic and Magical Figures
  • Angel Magic and Devotion to Angels
  • 8. Conjuration of Demons
  • The Making of a Clerical Underworld
  • Formulas and Rituals for Conjuring Spirits
  • The Sources for Demonic Magic
  • Demonic Magic in the Exempla
  • 9. Prohibition, Condemnation, and Prosecution
  • Legal Prohibition
  • Moral and Theological Condemnation
  • Patterns of Prosecution
  • The Rise of the Witch Trials.
Review by Choice Review

Magic is worth studying in early European history because it offers a perspective on culture that may serve as a useful corrective to anachronistic judgments as well as to mistaken ideas about the roles of religion and science in that culture. Kieckhefer's excellent book recognizes this, and it also recognizes the extremely diverse sources out of which medieval ideas and practices of magic were built and the different social locations in which they flourished. After an introductory chapter on method and design, Kieckhefer devotes two chapters to the Greco-Roman and early Christian problem of magic, and to Scandinavian and Celtic sources. Chapter 4 deals with practitioners, techniques, and materia magica. Later chapters treat magic in courtly literature, the impact of Arabic learning on the occult sciences, necromancy in the clerical underworld, and the literature of prohibition, condemnation, and prosecution. There is an extensive and very useful bibliography. This volume is part of the series "Cambridge Medieval Textbooks," and, like other volumes in that series, it delivers far more than its modest promise. Good undergraduate libraries ought to purchase two copies of this book, and good graduate libraries ought to have at least one. It will be enthusiastically recommended by every teacher who knows anything about the subject and despaired of finding such a book to which to send students. It is simply the best book on its subject in any language. E. Peters University of Pennsylvania

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.