Introduction
During the 15th century, fears about witchcraft escalated to a startling degree, and often led to wide-scale witch hunts. Prosecutions reached a high point by the late 16th century, during which period historians have estimated that 50,000 people, mostly women, were executed. Much of this new mania was the result of the publication in the mid-15th century of new theological treatises that rejected the centuries-old canon Episcopi (a passage in canon law that was skeptical of the reality of witchcraft). Many subsequent publications, some of which are included in this exhibit, seized on these once-heretical views, elevating the hunting of witches to a mania that engulfed Western Europe, finally coming to an end in the late 18th century.