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The Scourge of Demons
Possession, Lust, and Witchcraft in a Seventeenth-Century Italian Convent
Jeffrey R. Watt
In 1636, residents at the convent of Santa Chiara in Carpi in northern Italy were struck by an extraordinary illness that provoked bizarre behavior. Eventually numbering fourteen, the afflicted nuns were subject to screaming fits, throwing themselves on the floor, and falling abruptly into a deep sleep. When medical experts' cures proved ineffective, exorcists ministered to the women and concluded that they were possessed by demons and the victims of witchcraft. Catering to women from elite families, the nunnery suffered much turmoil for three years and, remarkably, three of the victims died from their ills. A maverick nun and a former confessor were widely suspected to be responsible, through witchcraft, for these woes.
Based primarily on the exhaustive investigation by the Inquisition of Modena, The Scourge of Demons examines this fascinating case in its historical context. The travails of Santa Chiara occurred at a time when Europe witnessed peaks in both witch-hunting and in the numbers of people reputedly possessed by demons. Female religious figures appeared particularly prone to demonic attacks, and Counter-Reformation Church authorities were especially interested in imposing stricter discipline on convents. Watt carefully considers how the nuns of Santa Chiara understood and experienced alleged possession and witchcraft, concluding that Santa Chiara's diabolical troubles and their denouement -- involving the actions of nuns, confessors, inquisitorial authorities, and exorcists -- were profoundly shaped by the unique confluence of religious, cultural, judicial, and intellectual trends that flourished in the 1630s.
Jeffrey R. Watt is professor of history at the University of Mississippi.
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DETAILS
5 b/w illustrations Size: 9 x 6 in 13 digit ISBN: 9781580462983
Binding: Hardback First published: 15/Mar/2009 Publication date: 15/Mar/2009 Price: 75.00 USD / 40.00 GBP
Imprint: University of Rochester Press
Series: Changing Perspectives on Early Modern Europe
Subject: Modern History
BIC class: AVH
STATUS: Not yet published
Details updated on 18/11/2008
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Contents
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Nuns, Witchcraft, and the Inquisition
| 1 | |
Female Religious, Claustration, and Santa Chiara of Carpi
| 2 | |
The Outbreak and Maleficia
| 3 | |
The Confessor and Love Magic
| 4 | |
The Exorcists and the Demons
| 5 | |
Sisters Dealta and Ippolita under Attack
| 6 | |
Bellacappa's Defense
| 7 | |
The Waning of the Possessions
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Reviews
For almost two years in the 1630s, the convent of Santa Chiara was turned upside down by the strange illnesses of several nuns, universally attributed to demonic possession brought about by witchcraft. In The Scourge of Demons, Jeffrey Watt reconstructs this fascinating episode in cogent detail. Fully in command of scholarship on female monasticism, witchcraft, possession, the Inquisition, and feminist interpretations, Watt offers a lucid cultural history that will inform and enthrall a wide range of readers. -- Anne Jacobson Schutte, professor emerita of History, University of Virginia
Jeffrey Watt has written an evocative and illuminating study of the dramatic events that unfolded among the Clarisses of Santa Chiara in a small northern Italian town during the early seventeenth century. His compelling narrative of demonic possession and witchcraft reveals the profound tensions and competing forces surrounding female spirituality and women's monastic foundations, masculine religious authority, and prevailing notions regarding the presence and power of demons. The Scourge of Demons helps us to understand and appreciate early modern encounters with the supernatural in fresh and imaginative ways. -- Raymond A. Mentzer, Daniel J. Krumm Family Chair in Reformation Studies, University of Iowa
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