Friday, December 29, 2006

Around One Quarter of "Witches" Were Men

The word "witch" has become synonymous with "woman accused of working magic," and the
consensus tells us that the witch trials in Europe and Colonial America were simply a war against
women (ie, "gendercide"). Most popular works on the subject ignore the men who were accused
and executed for supp-osedly practicing witchcraft. Academic works that don't omit male
witches usually explain them away, as if they were just a few special cases that don't really
count.
Into this gap step Andrew Gow, an associate professor of history at the University of Alberta,
and one of his grad students, Lara Apps. Their book Male Witches in Early Modern Europe
scours the literature and finds that, of the 110,000 people tried for witchcraft and the 60,000
executed from 1450 to 1750, some-where between 20 to 25 percent were men.

This is an average across Europe, the British Isles, and the American Colonies; the gender ratios
vary widely from place to place. The lowest percentages of males were persecuted in the Basel
region of Switzerland (5 percent) and in Hungary (10 percent). Places that hovered around the
50/50 mark were Finland (49 percent) and Burgundy (52 percent). Men were the clear majority
of "witches" in Estonia (60 percent) and Norway (73 percent). During Iceland's witch craze, from
1625 to 1685, an amazing 110 out of 120 "witches" were men, for a percentage of 92. As for
America, almost a third of those executed during the
infamous Salem witch trials (six out of nineteen) were men.
Besides bringing these numbers to light, professor Gow and
pupil Apps present serious challenges to the attempts to erase
male witches from the picture. For example, some writers
claim that the men were caught up in the hysteria solely
because they were related to accused women. In this
scenario, the men were only "secondary targets" ("collateral
damage," perhaps?). But in numerous instances men were
persecuted by themselves. In other cases, a woman became a
secondary target after her husband had been singled out as a
witch.
Although women were the overall majority of victims, the
"burning times" were pretty rough for men, too.

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