PLAY PODCASTS
Common Knowledge About The Middle Ages That Is Incorrect, Part 3: Witch Burnings

Common Knowledge About The Middle Ages That Is Incorrect, Part 3: Witch Burnings

History Unplugged Podcast · History Unplugged

February 26, 201951m 12s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (s.gum.fm) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

At the height of the witch burning craze, thousands people, largely women, were falsely accused of witchcraft. Many of them were burned, hanged, and executed, typically under religious pretense. But this phenomena largely didn’t happen in the Middle Ages, and if so it only occurred at the very end of this period.

Witch burnings did not begin en masse until the Renaissance period and did not peak until the Enlightenment period in the eighteenth century. Although executions by being burn at the stake were somewhat common in the Middle Ages, they were not used on “witches”—only heretics and other disobeyers of Catholic teachings received this ignominious death. Witch trials and their accusations of weather manipulation, transforming into animals, and child sacrifices, have no documented occurrence before 1400.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.