Devils Demons and Witchcraft PDF
Devils Demons and Witchcraft PDF
Devils Demons and Witchcraft PDF
Bibliographical Note
Devils, Demons and Witchclc'1ft: 244 I1ll1stlc'1tions for Artists is a
new work, first published by Dover Publications, Inc., in 1971.
The first three printings appeared under the title Devils, Demons,
Dealh and Damnalion.
9780486132518
Title Page
Copyright Page
INTRODUCTION
Devils and Demons
Casus Luciferi
Faust and Mephistopheles
Hell and Damnation
The Apocalyptic Horsemen
Witches and Warlocks
Witch-Hunting
Ars Moriendi
Danse Macabre
Memento Mori
Resurrection and Reckoning
Religio-Political Devilry
1. Mars, the AngeJ of Death. After a miniature in an Anglo-Saxon
manuscript, tenth century.
2. The Evil Spirit figured as a black bird whispering into the ear
of a magician. From a French manuscript Hortus Deliciamm,
eleventh century.
3. The Tempter in the form of a winged selpent whispering into
the ear of St. Martin. After a Saxon manuscript Legend of St.
Martin, eleventh century.
4. Demonic grotesque initial T. After a French calligraphic
manl1scIipt, twelfth century
5. Demonic grotesque initial T. After a French calligraphic
manuscript, the Rouleau mortuaire de Saint Vital, twelfth centl1lY.
6. The Evil Spirit swallowed by the Dragon ofHell. After a
miniature in an English manuscript, twelfth century.
[
.-'"
'J.,
12. Angel and Devil vying for the soul of a dying man. After a
miniature in an English manuscript, fourteenth centUlY.
Devils and Demons
*
Meet the Devil. Nowadays he usually appears as a suave, sly man
with telltale horns, hooves and tail; but in the past his bestial
nature was emphasized and he cropped up in a wide variety of
animal and mixed forms-usually loathly, since (in most artistic
conceptions) he had sacrificed his angelic beauty when he
disobeyed and rebelled against God. (As shown in some
illustrations in this chapter, animal forms for supernatural beings
and demons were common in ancient Egyptian and
Mesopotamian art.)
13. The lion-headed, eagle-footed AssyIian-Babylonian demon of
disease and evil, holding the mace of wounding and the dagger of
killing. After a wall carving at Nineveh.
The Devil's main objective is to tempt man and lead him away
from God. Two of the most famous temptations are illustrated in
this chapter: the temptation of Jesus in the desert of Palestine and
that of St. Anthony in the desert of Egypt. But every human being
must be assailed, and the Devil needs many demon helpers, such
as Belial and Beelzebub, who go about the world spreading
disease and madness (by "possessing" their victims) and
instigating all sorts of vice. The vice-ridden may not even be
aware that they are playing into the Devil's hands: witness the
vain woman who looks into her mirror expecting to see her face
and sees-something else.
14. Amam (the devourer), demon orthe nether world. After an
ancient Egyptian papyras illustration.
15. A Cynocephalus baboon as demon of the nether world. After
an illustration in an ancient Egyptian papyms.
16. The fight of the City of Satan (Babylon) against the City of
God (Syon). From Aarelias Aagastinas' De Trinitate. De Civitate
Dei, printed by Johann Amerbach, Basle, 1489.
17. The demon Belial appearing with his entoarage of foar lesser
demons before King Solomon.
18. The demon Belial presenting his credentials to Solomon.
From Jacobus de Teramo's Das Buch Belial, printed at
AugsbUlg, 1473.
45. Asmodeus, the Biblical demon of anger and lust (Tobit, 3:8).
46. Belphegor, the Biblical demon of evil, worshipped by the
Moabites (Numbers 25:3). By L. Breton, in Collin de Plancy's
Dictionnaire infernal, PaIis, 1863.
47. Beelzebub, the Biblical demon prince, Lord of the Flies
(Matthew 12:24).
48. Behemoth, the Biblical demon of animal strength (Job 40:15-
24). By L. Breton, in Collin de Plancy's Dictionnaire infernal,
Paris, 1863.
49. BOllc de la goetie Basphomet, the goat incarnation of the
Devil. After Eliphas Levi, from a pen drawing in a French occult
manl1scIipt La Magie Noire (Black Magic), nineteenth centl1lY.
Casus Luciferi
*
This is the Fall of Lucifer (the Lightbringer), chief of the
rebellious angels. The battle in Heaven, with St. Michael leading
the loyal forces against the future Devil (Satan) and demons, is
alluded to in the Revelation of St. John the Divine, and has
captured the imagination of many creative men. In literature its
fullest elaboration is found in Milton's Paradise Lost. In art it has
inspired innumerable works, including Durer's Apocalypse
woodcuts.
50. Casus Luciferi (the fa ll of Lucifer). From Biblia Pauperum
(the poor man's Bible), a block-book printed at Bamberg, 1470.
51. St. Michael evicting Lucifer and the fallen angels from
Heaven. From Albrecht Durer's Apocalypse, Nuremberg, 1498.
52. Title page from Thomas Heywood's The Hierarchie of the
blessed Angells, engraved by T. Cecill, pIinted by Adam Islip,
London, 1635.
53. Lucifer beginning to reign over the souls of sinners.
Illustration by John Baptist Medina [or John Milton's Paradise
Lost, London, J 688.
Faust and Mephistopheles
*
In some versions of medieval demon lore, Mephistopheles was
second only to Lucifer among the fallen archangels. In the Faust
story. a German Renaissance folk legend which gained literary
prominence with Marlowe and Goethe, Mephistopheles is the
devil who is summoned by the aged scholar-magician Faust and
heaps all pleasures on him in return for his soul.
It was Goethe's Faust especially which inspired an incredible
number of literary. theatrical and musical adaptations, as well as a
host of illustrations, including those by Delacroix shown in this
chapter. It was the figure of Faust as a scholar thirsting for
knowledge which inspired the unforgettable etching by
Rembrandt.
54. Mephistopheles, the popular sophisticated devil. From a pen
drawing in a French occult manuscript, La Magie Noire, Paris,
nineteenth century.
HISTORIA
�on�.�o6aft
�au�cn/bnn wcttbcfc6rroten
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r:zl�ic (f fl(�
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n�tI�rt 3ri[ 1"(1 (\i),ifbrn I t:(l.u- cr �lcr3\l.�irJ;.(n fut
(dG""t( ::1l'(l1I9,U'r (1«('9'''/ (db" all\�cri�"
tel r'1I'l' �crllf be n / f",iF rr cllb(!i� (ei,
n"t IT,.:d t'crbirnccn itC'bIJ
era r (.1113 HI.
�(II <.' (tp (�'\d' JH (�(I\'I ic1> (Ill u: J (In r( II ron nt- t rcw ..
�crt\lgcr W..Jfllllll-l 3ujJIIltmll gCj""
�'nl rnD 10 vfucf per-
r""tI'"
IACOBI JIlL
eq' $crr �n"rrrb,'ni � n'1�tI n,·('" �rn1
;l:", tfd/(" �(lIy" cr ron rll�.
C, .'1 G R.\ r 1.\ i r PR 1 V IL Ii C I O.
(BrDrud'fJlJ �4ndfurtlUD€m�nl
�"'�.].'��/I/I t3pICS.
-
55. Title page from the oldest extant book about Dr. Johannes
Faust, HistOlY of Dr. Johannes Faust, the Notorious Sorcerer and
Master of Black Magic, printed by Johann Spies, Frc"'mkf11l1, 1587.
Written by C H. M u.
�-��
� e�'llI.�f(t.. e.�<!o>p_\llIflloJ>.1!o(r/_l!"I'" errallt
WI \Ia!!lo2ld. 2BirO p�tC "'i-llbClUlj}lf�.
\!lnR ,.,,'UIII1_rll-
58. Playbill for the oldest German Faust comedy, The Life and
Death of the Great Arch-Sorcerer Dr. Johannes Faustlls, Bremen,
1688.
*
In Christian belief. Hell is the place where sinners are punished
after death. Dante's Inferno contains the most vivid descriptions
of the sufferings inflicted on the damned by the demons of Hell.
Similar places of punishment in the afterlife form part of other
religious beliefs, especially popular Buddhism in the Far East.
Two illustrations in this chapter show a scene of judging of souls
in ancient Egyptian religion and a modern depiction of the
punishments in Hades of three arch-sinners of ancient Greek
mythology: Tantalus was never allowed to taste of the fruit and
water that were so near to him; Sisyphus had constantly to roll a
huge rock to the top of a hill, from which it would just as
constantly roll back; Ixion was fastened to a perpetually turning
wheel.
62. Judgment of souls before the nether-world court of Osiris.
After an ancient Egyptian papyms illustration.
*
The true practicing witches of the late Middle Ages, Renaissance
and later periods (as distinguished from mentally ill or asocial
people accused of witchcraft) were most likely stubborn
adherents of pre-Christian pagan religious beliefs in which the
deity or deities (for Christians, the Devil and his demons) partook
of animal forms. (The Celtic enchanter Merlin is included in this
chapter as an example of a pre-Christian figure who remained
alive in Christian memories.)
Witches and warlocks (a special term for male witches) were
supposed to be able to prophesy, cast spells, raise storms, change
shape. and much more. They were aided by certain animal
�familiars," often cats and toads. They assembled periodically at
sabbaths, where they worshipped Satan. As shown in some of the
sixteenth-century German illustrations in this chapter, female
witches were not always thought of as withered crones.
82. The Devil making Jove to a witch.
83. Demons riding to the Sabbath. From UiIich Molitor's Von
den Unholden und Hexen. Constance. J 489.
,--"
93, 94. Witch and wizard riding to the Sabbath. From UlIich
Molitor's Hexen Meysterey, 1545.
95. Witches' brew. From Abraham SaUl·'s Ein Kurtze Treue
Warning (A Short, Tme Warning) , printed at Frankfurt, 1582.
96. Satan (plato) holding coal1 for newly anointed witches. From
Gerard d'Eaphra.tes' Livre de 1'histoire & ancienne croniqae,
printed by E. Groalleaa, Paris, 1549.
97. The Devil calTying a witch off to Hell.
*
Witchcraft was combated fiercely by both Catholics and
Protestants, with civil authorities lending a firm hand to the
Church. The many executions of Protestants and Jews by the
Catholic Inquisition is shown in several illustrations here as an
analogous phenomenon. The most famous witch hunt in America
(literally speaking) took place in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1692
and had Cotton Mather as its theorist.
108. Torturing of Jews accl1sed by the Inquisition as heretics and
pelpetrators of black magic. From a woodcut, 1475.
�.I,,"'�
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�l ....",. ...
116. Newsletter about the infernal deeds and the execution of the
witch Anna EbeIlehIin, printed by Elias Wellhoffe, "Briefmaier"
at Augsbwg, 1669.
OBSERVATIONS
__
T R Y A L S
OF
g'$cbcral ��ttcbCg.
Lakl'j Exclltt'd iQ
NE W-ENGL A N D:
An� of fcveral rcmark3bk.O.rnotiries therein CX�uuing.
Togtther witb,
,. Obrtr.ltiom 1.lpon rhe NI!�tt, the- NlIlllbH, �lld tile Opt:lni�fI of'chc Dc,ih.
�
I t A /hole Nlrw;w or ,btf outr'g<" t'om...irltd by t knot of
Wirchn in
j,..,,,It.l ..J, '�y "'II4.'h rtfcnl!Jlill(;. art
Co (ill (J(J>lJiniag, d\lr tinder "'tti�h
lorIP'£Iz(.I..n,j h'll�boorcoi.
III. Some COttrrels tlirtl'lin� � rllI( Im to�tlnenl of
.jo::ne h) I�K" p thr Tcniblt tllin!:, r��1
UIlII(WJ! and 1rn.a�lnG Rill,... «�1;IJ·Slirit, in
"·t"'-E"II��. '
IV. A bIrd . Dj(CDlIrfc: upon
cl\:>re Telll/uri""J whidl4lc t.hcrnorr O,<IitlllJ On;.
cn(i �'In.
By COTToN MATHER.
-_. - .
*
In medieval belief, demons lay in wait at the bedside of the dying
in hopes of snatching away their souls. The book Ars Moriendi
(The Art of Dying), which appeared in many block-hook editions
(both words and pictures cut on the same wood block) in the late
fifteenth century. depicted the struggle between vices (and
religious doubts) and virtues (religious certainty) in the mind of
the dying man and the fight between externalized good and evil
forces over his soul.
123. Death chamber. From an Italian Arte del Bene Mor ire,
Florence, about 1495.
124. Temptation through AvaIice. From a xylographic French
block-book edition of Ars moriendi, 1465.
125. Temptation through Impatience. From a Dutch block-book
edition of Ars Moriendi, 1465.
126. Triumph over temptation. From a xylographic German
block-book edition of Ars Moriendi, Augsburg, 1471.
127. Confession in church as a preparation for easy dying. From
Dominicus Capranica 's De Arte bene moriendi, printed by
Johann Clein and Piero Himel, Venice, 1490.
Pita morttnbi t�
X"�rii9 r/i Ir(i1r�G colfeeta dim (i"lIri9 3D rcriltCllOO
ill mOllie. Jl\Ol1ctlioboli(cfilg:;c1ti�111 ",leha mi
"bet tCblillinocli\'1ili::; ac mulml1l necdfaria.
�
128. Dying man surrounded by his attendants. Attributed to
Albrecht Durer,' from the t itle page of a Gelman edition of Ars
Moriendi, printed by Johann Weyssenbergel� Nurembelg, 1509.
Danse Macabre
*
A favorite medieval theme, connected with the view of the world
as mere vanity. was the leveling of all social classes and ranks in
death-with Death aptly personified as the bare, unidentifiable.
universal skeleton. At first in church frescoes and then in dozens
of books, the theme of Death seizing all men from emperors to
peasants became popular throughout Europe. The woodcut
illustrations of the Dance of Death by Hans Holbein the Younger
(eight of which are reproduced in this chapter) are the most
famous of alL
129 Death and the young man. From a Danse Macabre
engraving by the Master of the Housebook, Germany, 1490.
130. Death and the hunting party, an allegoric representation of
the might of Death. Engraving by Master H. W. (lVolf Hammer),
Austria, 1482.
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h
. itn llmltt an mn:manf l�ir CO:oc tdnt rmb!4dtT •
142. Death and the gentleman. From Der Doten Dantz (Dance of
the Dead), printed by Heinrich Knoblochzel� Heidelberg, 1490.
143. Death and the notables. From Der Doten Dantz, pIinted by
Jacob Meydenbach, Mainz, 1492.
J44. The orchestra of Death. From Der Doten Dantz, printed by
Heinrich Knoblochzer, Heidelberg, /490.
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bfn·
145. Death and the landowner. From Der Doten Dantz, pIinted
by Heimich Knoblochzel� Heidelberg, 1490.
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.•
167. "The dalJnce of Machabree, " from John Lydgate's The Fall
of PIinces, pIinted by Richard Toftel, London, 1554.
168. Religious fc'1natics dancing amid the graves in a churchyard,
in defiance of civilian superstition and ecclesiastic ukases. From
a Gelman engraving, about 1600.
169. Ghost cotillion of the souls of Black Death victims who were
buried alive in 1347. From an engraving by A. Aubrey, Gelwany,
1604.
6,
29' .;(ijaakr ltl1b �Ull�\ln'\tlattb«,
1 70. Death and the artists. Designed by Conrad Meyer, from
Rudolf Meyer's Sterbespiegel (Mirror of Dying), Zurich, 1650.
*
A memento mori (Latin for �remember that you must die") is an
object or pictorial symbol associated with death. Such symbols
include skulls, bones, coffins, urns, angels of death, upside-down
torches, graves and gravestones, hourglasses, scythes, spades,
toads, serpents, worms, owls, ravens, cypresses, weeping willows,
tuberoses, parsley, and many more. A good number of these
associations (and of our present-day funeral practices) can be
traced back to antiquity. These emblems of mortality have long
been used as items of adornment: Mary, Queen of Scots, owned a
skull-shaped watch; Martin Luther had a gold ring with a death's
head in enamel; even today skull motifs are used in all sorts of
jewelry and brie-a.-brae.
172. Scribes counting the severed heads of slain enemies after a
battle. Aller an Assyrian-Babylonian wall relief, Konyunjic
Palace.
1 75. A skull-watch.
176. One of the eaIliest extant printed labels for a poison bottle,
representing Death as a WOlw-eaten corpse. By an unknown
Rhenish artist, 1480-90.
1 77. Allegoric representation of Death. From Le grant kalendrier
et compost des Bergiers, printed by Nicolas le Roage, Troyes,
1496.
178. The Tree of Death (barial tree on the Island of Caffolos).
From Sir John Maandev ille's Trc"'lvels, pIinted by Wynkyn de
Warde, London, 1499.
179. Death leaping from Hell on his charger with arrow and
coffin, to claim his Jights over mortals. From Le grant kalendrieJ�
printed by Nicolas le Roage, Troyes, 1496.
180. Emblem of Death, with the motto "EveJYbody afterwards. "
Designed by Master A. F., from the Heiligtl1l11bl1ch {Book of
Relics}, Vienna, 1502.
hnollKanD
not
fpone
be!l8poealqurcM
� 1100 oneonelpfptmr.
:k.�
�n ��;,;��
.
thouha/l goeucn me of thincownc free
will thou whichc haflc giuen
dly !'Ct rhy bloud
wafh 1\\':lic the of my (innes.
thy hide mine vn-
thy Gc(cfuings COO1-
me foueraignc iudge. As ;:::::,
and di(ea1e incrca{c ) Coin.
J/ e,core thou thy SI:U"c . let not my
wauer . Let no,'"'Y 1>o , <I}',
,
gar. Let not my ch aritic W;I.:((
Let not my humane infirmitietice carl
downc: with the drc:lde of dc.nh.
when deathe lbaUhaue elared die
des of my bodic
milld
193. Prayer for the dead. From A Book of Christian Prayers,
printed by Richard Yardley and Peter Short for Richard Day,
London, 1590.
199. Symbol of Death with the motto "My glass runneth quickly. "
Plinter's device ofloost Hangers, Amsterdam, 1651 .
200. Alchemical allegOlY ofputrefaction. From Basil Valentine's
Azoth, PaIis, 1659.
201. The deadly demon of tobacco "drinking." From Jacob
Balde's anti-smoking pamphlet Die Truckene Trunckenheil (The
DIy Drunkenness), printed by Michael Endte/� Nuremberg. 1658.
Bills of Mortality
Fol' thL.$ Prcfcnt Yc.ar :
Besjnnjr� me 27'10 of '[)((emher I� �4, and
(J'Ldlng-rhe 19fh. of 1)m,drr followin g :
A$ .lifo, jbt 9 E lX E tIt A L or 1f(;olt lf4,j $ 1 t.L :
206. The urn, the leafless branch and the weeping w illow as
symbols of Death. By the American wood engraver Alexander
Anderson (J 775-1870).
207. The toad of Death. From a pen drawing in an occult
manuscript La Magie Noire (Black magic), France, nineteenth
century.
I think
the Vessel, that with fugit ive
Articulation answer'd, once did live,
And MelTy-make; and the cold Lip I kiss'd
How many Kisses might it take-and give.
*
In Christian belief. Christ rose from the dead, and on Judgment
Day. the last day of the world. everyone who ever lived will
awaken from the dead and be tried by the Lord and His angels.
Many great works of art have been based on this theme.
210. Detail from "The Last Judgment. " Engraving by Allard du
Hameel after Hieronimus van Aeken Bosch.
G lR A V E
�®m.
.A
·2 lzul?td&I ft )",chp d}cl7f
Ex('cuted
8Y
LOUIS S C H I AV O .N i: T T I ,
InveDl.ioTl!l
*
Devils, demons and similar infernal figures (including swine)
have been favorite material for religious and political
pamphleteers and caricaturists of all denominations and
convictions for centuries. Writers and artists attacking such real
and alleged abuses as drinking, dancing, smoking, gambling,
counterfeiting and usury have not hesitated to press Satan into
their service. This concluding chapter presents a wide panorama
of these polemic graphics with a smell of brimstone.
216. Jewish scholars, wearing the pointed hats forced upon them
by the law, are suckled by their wetnurse, the "Devil's pig. "
From the eaIliest extant anti-Semitic broadside, Germany, 1475.
217. Papist crowning the Devil's pig. Woodcut by Hans Weiditz,
from Ciceros Olficien, printed by Heinrich Steiner, Al1gsbl1lg,
1531.
lUit Otr wurlfd auff
I!l tommm
A N N O M� D� LV�
227. Title page from a conformist selmon by Andreas Musculus,
Yom Hosen Teuffel (the disordeI1y, inlc'111lOUS and audacious devil
of the long baggy breeches; an admonition and call to ordel),
printed byjohann Eichhorn, Frankfurt am Gder, 1555.
S C O V R GE
OF
D RV N K E N N E S.
By William Hornby Gent.
L O N D O N,
Pdmcd "'yG.E L D.for T"hflwuJ 'B.,rt'r, and arc tobcfoldi
c his shop, in Ihe Middfr.Row in
a HolborOl'*
�cJelnto SI/lft,./"nt, 1 6 1 I.
235. The Devil of Usury. From John Blaxton 's pamphlet against
loan sharks. The English Usurel� printed by 10hn Norton [or
Francis Bowman of Oxford, London, 1634.
T H E
DEVIL TU RN 'D
R 0 U N D-H E A 0:
0 , ,
P L V T O brcome , ]I R Q W N I S T.
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C O N V E NTIO N
C A N DIOAi E .
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