HOW THE WITCH BECAME MALIGNED
By Raven Grimassi
The oldest references to witches in Western literature
appear around 700 BC. The ancient Greek writings of Hesiod and Homer
contain the first descriptive accounts of witches and witchcraft. In such
tales we find the characters known as Circe and Medea, both sharing a
connection to the goddess Hecate. The earliest word used by the Greeks to
indicate a witch was pharmakis. Historian Georg Luck, in his essay
Imagining Greek and Roman Magic, states that pharmakis "became one of
the standard words for 'wise-woman/witch', used as a substantive." He
goes on to mention during this same period the word also expressed an
association with "drugs and incantations." Later the word
pharmakis would translate as venefica in Latin, which is addressed later
in this article.
The ancient Greek writer Hesiod makes the earliest
mention of the goddess Hecate. Hesiod tells the tale of how Hecate aided
the Olympic gods in their battle against the Titans. Because of this,
Hecate enjoyed an elevated status among the Olympic gods even though she
was never formally a member. In his work, The Theogony, Hesiod speaks of
Hecate as a goddess of fertility and abundance, associating her with
farmers and agriculture. With the passage of time, Hecate and her witches
would be viewed as a dark goddess of the Underworld and would become a
dreaded presence. As we shall see, it was the agenda of Roman emperors and
law-makers to purposely malign witches and convince people they were
dangerous company. However, the essential character of the witch developed
much earlier than this and we must look further into the past.
The witch-figure most likely evolved from the primitive
shaman or sorcerer/sorceress character common to tribal communities. Such
individuals possessed knowledge of the medicinal properties or effects of
various plants, and were believed to be in touch with the Otherworld in a
special way. As noted earlier the ancient Greek word for witch is "pharmakis,"
and from this we derive the modern English word "pharmacist."
Because of their knowledge and position within the community the
witch-figure was also most likely the keeper and transmitter of myth and
lore.
In Latin the word for witch was originally saga, which
indicates a fortune-teller. This was later changed to venefica, which
indicates one who prepares love potions. The earliest laws against
witchcraft dealt with the use of herbal potions employed in love spells.
The root word for venefica is the same as that for the word venereal,
derived from the Latin vene, indicating Venus. The word venefica was later
used to indicate one who possessed knowledge of poisonous plants, and over
the course of time this became its specific meaning. Eventually almost all
Latin words for poison were based upon vene as a rootword for poison,
particularly when referring to witches and witchcraft. No doubt the
witch-figure commanded respect but was also viewed with a healthy fear of
his or her power and knowledge.
One of the most powerful figures in ancient times to be
associated with witchcraft was Circe. Circe appears in the tale of Ulysses
who lands on Circe's island during his travel back to Greece. According to
the story, Circe turns Ulysses' men into swine and he is enchanted by one
of her herbal love potions. He stays on the island for a year, and is then
freed by the intervention of the god Hermes who gives Ulysses an herbal
antidote. An alternative interpretation of this scenario is that this tale
was meant to excuse the gluttony and drunkenness of Ulysses' men and to
pardon his acts of adultery with Circe while living on the island. In the
tale of Medea, she kills her husband and their children after her husband
leaves her for another woman. Is this the act of a witch, or is it more
the act of a lover scorned? Such things happen even in modern society all
too frequently and have nothing to do with the religion of the people
involved. The popular term given by defense attorneys for such crimes of
violence is "temporary insanity."
With the rise of civilization and the establishment of
governments, the witch became maligned as an evil and destructive
character. Laws against witchcraft and magic appear long before the rise
of Christianity in many ancient cultures such as Rome. Independent,
free-thinking, and self-empowered people have always been viewed as a
threat by governments. The rulers of Rome feared assassination by poison
(as did later the Kings of Europe) and thus anyone with an advanced
knowledge of herbalism was a potential enemy. Additionally Witchcraft was
a secret society, which also contributed to suspicion concerning its
practices.
The ancient Roman poet Horace was among the earliest to
portray witches as ugly old hags in contrast to the earlier image of the
witch as a beautiful seductress reflected in the writings of Hesiod and
Homer. The Romans valued youth to excess, and the association of old age
with witches was designed to rob them of power and vitality in the public
mind. Horace writes in his Epodes that witches worship Proserpina and
Diana. Both deities were viewed in a negative light by the followers of
the Roman State religion who favored the so-called "high gods."
Diana and Proserpina were the deities of rural pagans and magicians, both
classes that were looked down upon by the sophisticated city dwellers.
Ovid wrote that a belief in witches (striges) was a
superstitious peasant belief having nothing to do with State religion.
Therefore the witch was a popular figure to ridicule and malign. Horace
also makes the connection of the moon with the practice of Witchcraft.
Ancient Greek/Roman literature depicts the Witch involved in human and
animal sacrifice, practices that were common in the vast majority of
ancient cultures including archaic Aegean/Mediterranean and Celtic
cultures.
However, as religions evolved over the centuries, the
Witch was never portrayed as having moved beyond such practices. It is
interesting to note that the ancient Greeks classified witches among those
who practiced "illicit religions." The reason for this is that
in Greek culture, and to a degree in Roman culture, a
"recognized" sect had to have a temple. Magicians, diviners,
witches, and other subculture figures were comprised typically of the poor
segment of the population and therefore had no funds to build and maintain
temples. This is one of the chief reasons why witches were not portrayed
in ancient times as people of a religious nature but rather as magic
users. This view persisted despite ancient writings that told stories of
the witch Medea who prayed to Hecate, and the witch Canidia who prayed to
Hecate, Diana, and Proserpina.
To discourage people from having personal dealings with
witches, the witch was associated with many perversions and evil deeds.
Roman officials fostered the image of the witch as a grave robber, a very
horrid thing in Roman culture because Roman religion honored the dead as
well as the ancestral spirit. All of these factors created an unwelcome
environment for witches, keeping them out of the public eye. The fact that
witches were forced into social isolation made Roman officials feel less
threatened since it became increasingly difficult for their enemies to
locate witches and obtain herbal potions. The witch was now fully
established as an undesirable in society. Depicting her as old and ugly
took away the physical vitality of the witch figure and made his or her
appear less dynamic. In ancient Roman culture youth was celebrated and old
age was dreaded. Like the Greeks before them, the Romans held to the
philosophy that "good" was beautiful and "evil" was
ugly. Thus the witch was purposely depicted as an old ugly hag.
With the establishment of Christianity as the official
religion of Rome circa 325 AD, the Witch was already viewed as a doer of
evil deeds and the Church quickly assigned her to the company of demons
and devils. The power of Rome was replaced by the Roman Catholic Church,
which sent monks and bishops into various regions of Europe to establish
churches. Augustine, the most influential Christian theologian, taught
that pagan religion and magic were invented by the Devil. He was the first
person to associate witches with the devil. Thus the attitudes of earlier
Rome towards witches, now assimilated and redesigned by the Roman Catholic
Church, were carried to northern Europe and the British Isles. Within a
few centuries the stereotype of the witch as an evil servant of Satan was
established throughout Europe.
In the King James version of the Bible, the verse Exodus
22:18 reads "Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live." However, in
the original language of the text, the word kashaph meant a poisoner, or
more specifically one who assassinates by using poison, and not literally
a "witch" as indicated in the King James text. Whether the
mistranslation was intentional or simply misguided, the King James
translation provided support to those who took the lives of many people
charged with practicing witchcraft. Another biblical verse used to support
the death sentence for those convicted of witchcraft was Leviticus 20:27.
Although this verse does not contain the word witch (mistranslated or
otherwise) it and other related biblical verses were used by the Church
and secular courts to indicate witches and witchcraft as inclusive in the
meaning of the text.
The linking of witches and witchcraft to Satan first
appears around 400 AD due largely to the undertakings of St. Augustine of
Hippo. St. Augustine taught that anything pagan was evil and must
therefore come from the works of the devil. The Church, convinced that
anything contrary to the beliefs of Christianity must indeed be evil,
declared everything associated with pre-Christian religion as evil.
Therefore, witches were then assigned by the Church as servants of the
Judaic-Christian Satan figure, even though the witches did not subscribe
to the concept of the devil.
The devil, or Satan, is a Judaic concept, a
personification of evil that was almost unique in ancient times.
Christianity, its foundation being rooted in Judaic religion, inherited
the concept of the devil or Satan from Jewish religion. Witchcraft was
already long established centuries before the world knew of this
Judaic-Christian concept. The Church, eager to discredit paganism, grafted
the devil onto pre-Christian religion. It even went so far as to use art
to portray Satan (who is never physically described in the Bible) with
horns, hooves, and pointed ears just like the pagan horned god of
antiquity.
Extreme physical and psychological torture was used to
extract "confessions" from those accused of practicing
witchcraft. The torture continued until the person admitted to the charges
against them or until they died from the trauma. Questions regarding devil
worship were put to the accused that had no basis in any past historical
practice or in practices actually documented by any research during the
period of the trials. The Church, together with the Inquisition, created
the concept of devil worship by witches along with the details of its
beliefs and practices. People were then forced people to confess to
membership in the witches' sect by means of horrible pain and suffering.
Despite the insistence of the Church that witches
worshipped Satan, references to the worship of the goddess Diana by
witches persist through the Renaissance era in Witchcraft trials, and are
noted as late as the end of the 19th century by such folklorists as
Charles Leland. Even as early as 900 AD the Church addressed the worship
of Diana by the "society of Diana" in the Canon Episcopi. This
document stated that the followers of Diana were deceived by Satan
regarding her worship and that everything they professed to experience was
mental delusion.
The 18th century saw the beginning of the decline of
witchcraft persecutions. It came both in the modification of laws and in
the attitudes of judicial authorities who grew inclined not to take the
charges of witchcraft seriously. France was among the first to modify its
laws dealing with witchcraft, taking place in 1682. The next to follow
suit was Prussia in 1714. Great Britain modified its witchcraft laws in
1736 followed by Russia in 1770, Poland in 1776, and Sweden in 1779.
In essence the judicial system began to view the
practice of witchcraft as a pretense to possessing power, an act of fraud.
People who performed divination, magic, or any types of enchantments
risked a year in prison. England repealed this act in 1951. Following the
repeal of the Witchcraft Act in 1951, the writings of Gerald Gardner
introduced the world to the religion known as Wicca. Gardner portrayed
witches as a secret society driven underground by Christianity and
surviving as a subculture for many centuries. Gardner's witches were
healers and magicians who worshipped a god and goddess figure. They were
neither the beautiful evil witches of Greco-Roman times, nor the ugly evil
witches of the Middle Ages. Today the witch has rightfully taken his or
her place in modern society as a religious and spiritual individual.
The beautiful witch is back!
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