Page:War and Other Essays.djvu/154

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118
ESSAYS OF WILLIAM GRAHAM SUMNER

and Italy.[1] The German writers say that it was too hostile to German mores to be allowed in Germany. In 1679, in the Tyrol, a woman was tortured until she accused her own children of witchcraft. After her execution her son, fourteen years old, and her daughter, twelve years old, were beheaded and their bodies were burned, while another son, nine years old, and a daughter, six years old, were flogged and forced to witness the execution of their older brother and sister.[2]

Scherr[3] says that it is not an exaggerated estimate, but a very moderate one, that the witch-persecutions cost one hundred thousand lives in Germany. Remigius, a witch-judge, boasted that, between 1580 and 1595, in Lothringia, he had executed eight hundred witches.[4] "Paramo boasts that, in a century and a half from the commencement of the sect in 1404, the Holy Office had burned at least thirty thousand witches who, if they had been left unpunished, would easily have brought the whole world to destruction"; Lea inquires, most reasonably, "Could any Manichean offer more practical evidence that Satan was lord of the visible universe?"[5] This figure is far more trustworthy than those which are in the books about the number of persons executed for heresy.[6] The witch-persecutions covered two centuries, from 1450 to 1650, so the above estimate would mean that, on an average, five hundred were executed in a year. The executions often included a great number at once — such was especially the case during the century of greatest activity, from 1580 on.[7] The last mass burning in Germany was in 1678, when ninety-seven persons

  1. Hansen. J.: l.c., 463.
  2. Hoensbroech: l.c., I, 515.
  3. Geschichte der deutschen Frauenwelt, II, 167.
  4. Scherr, J.: Deutsche Kultur- und Sittengeschichte, 379.
  5. Lea, H. C.: l.c., III, 549.
  6. Flade, P.: l.c., 90.
  7. Scherr, J.: l.c., 381.