- Canon Episcopi
The Canon Episcopi is an important document in the history of
witchcraft .ref|Stephens It is first attested in the "Libri de synodalibus cuasis et disciplinas ecclesiasticis" composed byRegino of Prüm around 906, but Regino considered it an older text; he, and later scholars following him, believed it to be from a "Council of Anquira" in 314, but no other evidence of this council exists, and scholars today consider it probably to be a ninth-century Frankish composition.ref|Russellref|Lea It was included inBurchard of Worms ' "Decretum" (compiled between 1008 and 1012), an early attempt at collecting all of Canon law, and subsequently in Gratian's authoritativeCorpus juris canonici of c. 1140. Because it was included in Gratian's compilation the text was treated as canon law for centuries, untilRoman Catholic views onEuropean witchcraft began to change dramatically in thelate medieval period.The Canon Episcopi has received a great deal of attention from historians of the witch craze period as early documentation of the
Catholic church 's theological position on the question of witchcraft. It has also received attention from scholars ofNeo-paganism , such asRonald Hutton ref|Hutton, because the document seems to link witchcraft beliefs with the Pagan worship of thegoddess Diana ofRoman myth . This linkage has been used by authors, such asCharles Godfrey Leland , as support for the thesis, normally attributed toMargaret Murray , that European witchcraft represented a continuation of pre-Christian Pagan beliefs.While the entire Canon Episcopi is several paragraphs long, the critical passage is as follows:
:"Have you believed or have you shared a superstition to which some wicked women claim to have given themselves, instruments of Satan, fooled by diabolical phantasms? During the night, with Diana, the pagan goddess, in the company of a crowd of other women, they ride the backs of animals, traversing great distances during the silence of the deep night, obeying Diana's orders as their mistress and putting themselves at her service during certain specified nights. If only these sorceresses could die in their impiety without dragging many others into their loss. Fooled into error, many people believe that these rides of Diana really exist. Thus they leave the true faith and fall into pagan error in believing that a god or godess [Sic (Latin)| ["sic"] can exist besides the only God."ref|Koziol
The unknown author's position is that these "rides of Diana" are "superstition" and "phantasm"; that they did not actually exist, and goes so far as to condemn belief in the existence of the "rides of Diana" as leaving the true faith, or committing
heresy . This skeptical treatment of magic in the eleventh century has been compared by witchcraft scholars, such as Jeffrey Russellref|Russell, to the credulity of the much later witch craze period. The authors of the "Malleus Maleficarum ", a witch-hunter's manual from 1487 that played a key role in the witch craze, were forced to argue for a reinterpretation of the Canon Episcopi in order to reconcile their beliefs that witchcraft was both real and effective with those expressed in the Canonref|Malleus.A further complication in the history of the Canon Episcopi is the addition of other names to the document as companions to Diana. Burchard of Worms added the
New Testament figureHerodias to his copy of the document in one passage, and theTeutonic goddessHolda in another. Later, in the twelfth century,Hugues de Saint-Victor quoted the Canon Episcopi as reading "DianaMinerva " in a church tract that was attributed toAugustine of Hippo . Later collections included the names "Benzozia" and "Bizazia"ref|AHotIotMA.Notes and references
#See especially cite book | first=Walter | last=Walter | title=Demon lovers: witchcraft, sex, and the crisis of belief | publisher=University of Chicago Press | year=2002
#cite book | first=Jeffrey Burton | last=Russell | authorlink=Jeffrey Burton Russell | title=Witchcraft in the Middle Ages | publisher=Cornell University Press | year=1972 pp. 75-82.
# cite web | title=Book 8, Chapter 9, A History of the Spanish Inquisition, vol. 4 | url=http://libro.uca.edu/lea4/8lea9.htm | accessdate=October 15 | accessyear=2005
#cite book | first=Ronald | last=Hutton | authorlink=Ronald Hutton | title=Triumph of the Moon | publisher =Oxford University Press | year=2000 | id=0500272425
# Translation by Geoffrey G. Koziol. Full translated text at cite web | title=University of Berkeley translations | url=http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:vvxWJsgc8a8J:ishi.lib.berkeley.edu/history155/translations/burchard.html+%22Burchard+of+Worms%22+Diana&hl=en | accessdate=October 13 | accessyear=2005
# cite book | first=Jeffrey | last=Russell | authorlink=Jeffrey Burton Russell | title=Witchcraft in the Middle Ages | publisher =Cornell University Press | year=1984 | id=0801492890
# "Malleus Maleficarum ", Part II: Chapters 2, 8 and 11.
# cite web | title=Excerpt from A History of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages | url=http://www.publishersrow.com/ebookshuk/cart/bookexcerpt.asp?ProdIndex=0&bookid=106&formatid=&o=1121403600000 | accessdate=October 15 | accessyear=2005
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