"Secret, Black, and Midnight Hags": The Conception, Presentation and Functions of Witches in English Renaissance DramaBraumüller, 2005 - 439 Seiten |
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Seite 18
... practice , often ignored or forgotten , since the same person may use the arts of sorcery for good or for ill " . " 3 In ... practices . In Mesopotamia , for example , magic was already an ambiguous concept that was known for protection ...
... practice , often ignored or forgotten , since the same person may use the arts of sorcery for good or for ill " . " 3 In ... practices . In Mesopotamia , for example , magic was already an ambiguous concept that was known for protection ...
Seite 22
... practices were illegal ( 18–19 ) . As George Mora suggests with respect to Roman law , 29 the proliferation of occult sects may have been a reason for the intolerant attitude of the state . The Twelve Tables ( 450-401 BC ) pronounced ...
... practices were illegal ( 18–19 ) . As George Mora suggests with respect to Roman law , 29 the proliferation of occult sects may have been a reason for the intolerant attitude of the state . The Twelve Tables ( 450-401 BC ) pronounced ...
Seite 63
... practices and powers transcends a psychologically plau- sible level of self - awareness ( cf. 182 ) . Idololatria's second monologue on her practices ( 499–546 ) is clearly in- tended to mock the Catholic belief in the protection and ...
... practices and powers transcends a psychologically plau- sible level of self - awareness ( cf. 182 ) . Idololatria's second monologue on her practices ( 499–546 ) is clearly in- tended to mock the Catholic belief in the protection and ...
Inhalt
Witchcraft in the European Context | 13 |
Malevolent Witches in English Renaissance Drama | 55 |
Conclusions | 291 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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