(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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How to Punish a Witch in 16th-Century England
The Great Unpleasantness? World War One in Whodunits
Curious George Escapes Nazi Europe
Early American Newspapers and Freedom of the Press
A Royal Son: Henry the Young King
The Trotula and Medieval Gynecology
Tuxedo Park: Inside the Gate
The Woman and the 20-Pound Tumor
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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
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