(Kristin) Witchcraft in the late medieval and early modern European world was a highly gendered crime. The majority of victims were women but a significant percentage were men – and in some regions, men made up the majority of the accused. The male witch appeared wherever there were witchcraft accusations – he was known as a maleficius, a wicca, a sorcier, or hexenmeister … just don’t call him a warlock.
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The Trotula and Medieval Gynecology
Tuxedo Park: Inside the Gate
The Woman and the 20-Pound Tumor
54° 40' or Fight: How a Latitude Line became a Rallying Cry
Ghosts of Christmas Past
Olga Nethersole and the Sapho Scandal
Martha, the Last Passenger Pigeon
The Un-Engagement of Jane Austen
History for Halloween II
History for Halloween I
History for Halloween III
Poison in Colonial India
The (Failed) Republic of Fredonia
Tycho Brahe: The Astronomer with a Copper Nose
The Rise of the British Spy Novel
The Murder of Sweden's King Gustav III
The Life of Beatrice de Planissoles
Desert Queens? Women at the Edges of Empire from Hester Stanhope to Gertrude Bell
The Life and Crimes of Caravaggio
Al Capone's Pineapple Primary
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