The Evolution of the Medieval Witch – and Why She’s Usually a Woman

The Evolution of the Medieval Witch – and Why She’s Usually a Woman

By Jennifer Farrell, Lecturer in Medieval History, University of Exeter. First published on The Conversation.

Flying through the skies on a broomstick, the popular image of a witch is as a predominantly female figure – so much so that the costume has become the go-to Halloween outfit for women and girls alike. But where did this gendered stereotype come from? Part of the answer comes from medieval attitudes towards magic, and the particular behaviours attributed to men and women within the “crime” of witchcraft.

Taking one aspect of the witch’s characterisation in popular culture – her association with flight – we can see a transformation in attitudes between the early and later Middle Ages. In the 11th century, Bishop Burchard of Worms said of certain sinful beliefs:

Some wicked women, turning back to Satan and seduced by the illusions and phantasms of demons, believe [that] in the night hours they ride on certain animals with the pagan goddess Diana and a countless multitude of women, and they cross a great span of the world in the stillness of the dead of night.

According to Burchard, these women were actually asleep, but were held captive by the devil, who deceived their minds in dreams. He also believed that none but the very “stupid and dim-witted” could think that these flights had actually taken place.

Washington Becomes First State to Allow ‘Human Composting' As A Burial Method

Washington Becomes First State to Allow ‘Human Composting' As A Burial Method

In 2015, cremations outpaced burials for the first time in United States history. And as the National Funeral Directors Association points out, this upward trend is set to continue over the coming decades, with the national cremation rate predicted to reach nearly 80 percent by 2035. Still, while cremation has obvious environmental advantages over burial—think of all the wood, reinforced concrete, steel, copper and carcinogenic formaldehyde needed to inter the deceased—the process isn’t as Earth-friendly as you might think. In fact, Laura Yan reported for Pacific Standard in 2016, cremation releases 600 million pounds of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere every year.

Human composting is the brainchild of Katrina SpadeCEO of alternative burial company Recompose. Speaking with local news station KIRO 7, Spade explains that recomposition involves moving the body to a specially designed facility—“part public park, part funeral home, part memorial to the people we love,” in the entrepreneur’s words—and placing it inside of a vessel filled with wood chips, alfalfa and straw. After several weeks of microbial activity, the body breaks down into soil that can then be given to family of the deceased or used by conservation groups to “nourish the [surrounding] land.” Overall, the process uses an eighth of the energy required for cremation and saves more than one metric ton of carbon dioxide for every individual who opts to use it.

Mariam de Vinzelle by Leon Mark In 'A Place in the Sun' for Vogue Ukraine June 2019

Mariam de Vinzelle by Leon Mark In 'A Place in the Sun' for Vogue Ukraine June 2019

Rising model Mariam de Vinzelle is styled in summer elegance by Danielle van Camp for ‘A Place in the Sun’. Leon Mark captures the camp contrasts of big fish and over-sized bows elegance for Vogue Ukraine June 2019./ Hair by Pawel Solis; makeup by Anthony Preel

Filip Koludrovic Flashes ‘Liberdade De EXXXpressao’ For Vogue Portugal May 2019

Filip Koludrovic Flashes ‘Liberdade De EXXXpressao’ For Vogue Portugal May 2019

Vogue Portugal’s May 2019 issue explores issues and evolution in public expressions of human sexuality. Fronted by model Claudia Lavender, the editorial ‘Liberdade De EXXXpressao’ also features George Griffiths, Janusz Kuhlmann, Mijo Mihaljcic and Veronika Primorac. Christopher Maul styles the quintet in images by Filip Koludrovic./ Hair by Hirokazu EnDo; makeup by Jinny Kim; set designer Ciaran Beale

Donald Trump: Why White Evangelical Women Support Him

Donald Trump: Why White Evangelical Women Support Him

During the US president Donald Trump’s State of the Union address in early February, House Democratic women showed up clad all in white. The colour, a nod to the suffragettes, was meant to show their displeasure with the president’s policies towards women, climate change and immigration. But Trump’s contentious relationship with Democratic women contrasts sharply with the support he receives from another group of women – white evangelicals.

As is well known by now, in the November 2016 presidential election, 80% of white evangelicals voted for Trump. That constituted the largest “evangelical vote” in nearly two decades. If scholarsjournalists and the general public have puzzled over why so many white evangelicals would vote for someone whose language and behaviour violated key tenets of the Christian faith, the question of why evangelical women voted for him is even more puzzling – especially given Trump’s long track record of alleged sexual misconductand derogatory comments about women.

But the 2016 vote wasn’t a fluke. A recent poll reports that two-thirds of white evangelical women still approve of the president.

Naomi Wolf's 'Outrages' Book Exposed On Air By BBC As Full Of Major Errors About Victorians

Naomi Wolf's 'Outrages' Book Exposed On Air By BBC As Full Of Major Errors About Victorians

Author, activist Naomi Wolf is living the worst nightmare for a writer. She did not properly investigate the term "death recorded", a key research term in her new book 'Outrages: Sex, Censorship, and the Criminalization of Love, '

The error is a whopper, one that goes to a core premise of her book, which deals with people not only being imprisoned for 'illegal love acts' but -- according to Naomi -- being executed.

Wolf was interviewed on BBC Radio Thurs. where she apparently sat with interviewer Matthew Sweet , as he read to Wolf the definition of “death recorded,” a 19th-century English legal term. “Death recorded” means that a convict was pardoned for his crimes rather than given the death sentence.

The legal term means the exact opposite of what Naomi assumed. The error speaks volumes about her lack of scholarship and a book that is on sale as we speak.

Chrissy Teigen, Queen of Social Media Lands An Airstream Photo Op For Porter Edit, May 24, 2019

Chrissy Teigen, Queen of Social Media Lands An Airstream Photo Op For Porter Edit, May 24, 2019

Talented wit, supermom, wife, cook par excellence, Trump troller and the “queen of social media” Chrissy Teigen has become “the woman that everyone wants to befriend” writes Christine Lennon for the May 24, 2019 issue of Porter Edit. Tracy Taylor styles Chrissy in ‘Hot topics’ for images by Sebastian Kim.

Jordan Daniels Wears 'Island Style' Lensed By Laura Coulson For WSJ Magazine June 2019

Jordan Daniels Wears 'Island Style' Lensed By Laura Coulson For WSJ Magazine June 2019

Rising model Jordan Daniels is styled by Clare Byrne in ‘Island Style’, featuring looks from Gucci, Bottega Veneta, Ralph Lauren, Mugler, Burberry and more. Photographer Laura Jane Coulson is behind the lens for WSJ Magazine June 2019./ Hair by Shingo Shibata; makeup by Emi Kaneko

Ola Rudnicka Worships The Sun In Tomas De La Fuente Images For Telva Magazine

Ola Rudnicka Worships The Sun In Tomas De La Fuente Images For Telva Magazine

Model Ola Rudnicka soaks up the rays, styled by Gabriela Bilbao in sunny-colors swimwear and lingerie-inspired bits. Photographer Tomas De La Fuente captures the sensual beauty for Telva Magazine./ Hair & makeup by Yurema Villa

Elephants Reduced to a Political Football as Botswana Brings Back Hunting

Elephants Reduced to a Political Football as Botswana Brings Back Hunting

Botswana has reinstated trophy hunting after a 5-year moratorium on the practice.

In the wake of evidently declining wildlife numbers, former president Ian Khama imposed the ban in early 2014. Elephant numbers had plummeted by 15% in the preceding decade. The hunting industry had been granted a total quota of between 420 and 800 elephants a year during that time. Evidence of abuse was prolific and communities were not benefiting from the fees that hunters were paying.

Over the past five years Botswana has earned a reputation as the continent’s last elephant haven. It harbours just over a third of Africa’s remaining savanna elephants.

Khama’s successor, Mokgweetsi Masisi, has been in the job for just over a year. He’s promoted a conservation doctrine that is diametrically opposed to Khama’s.

Masisi recently hosted a conference in Kasane that brought together heads of state and environment ministers from Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Its pretext was to formulate a common vision for managing southern Africa’s elephants under the banner of the Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA). But the conference was used to drum up support for Botswana’s intended reversion to elephant hunting.

Lais Ribeiro Fronts Colorama Beauty Lensed By Enrique Vega For Numero Russia May 2019

Lais Ribeiro Fronts Colorama Beauty Lensed By Enrique Vega For Numero Russia May 2019

Top model Lais Ribeiro is styled by Ilaria Niccolini in Lais' Colors!, vivid beauty looks lensed by Enrique Vega for Numero Russia May 2019./ Hair by Martin Christopher Harper; makeup by Carolina Gonzalez

Elle Fanning's Dior Haute Couture 'New Look' Tribute To ‘Once Upon A Time In Hollywood’ Cannes Premiere

Elle Fanning's Dior Haute Couture 'New Look' Tribute To ‘Once Upon A Time In Hollywood’ Cannes Premiere

Actor Elle Fanning was an apparition straight out of old Hollywood glamour, appearing at the Cannes 2019 screening of Quentin Tarantino’s highly-anticipated film ‘Once Upon A Time In Hollywood’, wearing a jaw-dropping tribute to Christian Dior’s New Look.

The 21-year-old Fanning is the youngest juror in the history of the Cannes Film Festival and doesn’t appear in ‘Once Upon A Time in Hollywood’. The film tackles the summer of 1969, a tumultuous moment of American unrest and the Manson murder of pregnant actor Sharon Tate (played by Margot Robbie). At the time, the pregnant Tate was married to besieged director Roman Polanski.

Julia Johnson Is Nature Girl In 'Paradise Found' By Gilles Bensimon For ELLE UK June 2019

Julia Johnson Is Nature Girl In 'Paradise Found' By Gilles Bensimon For ELLE UK June 2019

Brit model Julia Johnson (Premier Mgt) is styled by Anne-Marie Curtis in ‘Paradise Found’. Photographer Gilles Bensimon flashes the hot weather looks for ELLE UK June 2019./ Hair by Benedicte Cazau Beyret; makeup by Andrew Gallimore

Emily DiDonato Is Beach Weather Beautiful Lensed By Zoey Grossman For Numéro Tokyo

Emily DiDonato Is Beach Weather Beautiful Lensed By Zoey Grossman For Numéro Tokyo

Top model Emily DiDonato is styled by Deborah Afshani in Prada, Saint Laurent, Isabel Marant and more , as photographer Zoey Grossman flashes her seaside for the June 2019 issue of Numéro Tokyo.

Prada Goes Fur Free In All Company Brands Starting With Spring 2020 Collections

Prada Goes Fur Free In All Company Brands Starting With Spring 2020 Collections

Italian luxury Prada is joining the ranks of fur-free luxury brands, announcing that all collections starting with women’s spring/summer 2020 will not use fur. Prada previously used fur from foxes, minks and rabbits in its luxury collections.

The decision comes after working closely with the Humane Society International, Fur Free Alliance, and Italian animal rights group LAV. Prada’s subsidiary Miu Miu is on the same fur-free spring 2020 timetable. Products that have already been produced will be sold.

How One State Has Become a Model for Protecting Abortion Rights From Supreme Court Conservatives

How One State Has Become a Model for Protecting Abortion Rights From Supreme Court Conservatives

As Republican-controlled state legislatures across the United States pass near-total abortion bans, Vermont Democrats are looking to establish the country’s most comprehensive abortion rights protections.

The pro-choice effort in Vermont is two-pronged: a constitutional amendment via Proposition 5 to guarantee personal reproductive liberty, and bill H 57, which codifies the right to an abortion and prohibits public entities from interfering with a person’s right to choose.

Vermont’s Democratic-majority house and senate have passed both measures this session, and H 57 will soon head to the governor’s desk, where he can either sign it, allow it to become law by taking no action, or veto it. Vermont Gov. Phil Scott (R) does not plan to veto H 57, his spokesperson told Rewire.News.