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Cover of "The Night Battles" by Carlo Ginzburg, featuring tan and orange tones over a woodcut of angels and demons in combat.
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Cover of "The Night Battles" by Carlo Ginzburg, featuring tan and orange tones over a woodcut of angels and demons in combat.
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The Night Battles

Witchcraft and Agrarian Cults in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries

Carlo Ginzburg
translated by John Tedeschi, Anne C. Tedeschi, and Stephen Twilley

updated edition
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The classic study of witchcraft and popular belief, newly revisited.

A landmark of microhistory, The Night Battles remains one of the most daring and influential investigations of witchcraft and popular belief in early modern Europe. Through meticulous research in the inquisitorial archives of northern Italy, Carlo Ginzburg reconstructs the story of the benandanti—the "good walkers"—peasants of the Friuli region who claimed that, while their bodies slept, their spirits journeyed into the night to battle witches and warlocks in defense of their crops and communities.

Armed with fennel stalks...

The classic study of witchcraft and popular belief, newly revisited.

A landmark of microhistory, The Night Battles remains one of the most daring and influential investigations of witchcraft and popular belief in early modern Europe. Through meticulous research in the inquisitorial archives of northern Italy, Carlo Ginzburg reconstructs the story of the benandanti—the "good walkers"—peasants of the Friuli region who claimed that, while their bodies slept, their spirits journeyed into the night to battle witches and warlocks in defense of their crops and communities.

Armed with fennel stalks, these benandanti fought for fertility and abundance. To the inquisitors who interrogated them, however, such nocturnal visions could only signify diabolical witchcraft. Over decades of questioning and reinterpretation, a profound cultural clash unfolded, and the benandanti were gradually transformed from defenders of the harvest into supposed participants in the witches' sabbat. From this richly documented case, Ginzburg advances a bold hypothesis: that across Europe, elements of agrarian and ecstatic traditions were recast under pressure from ecclesiastical authorities into the stereotype of satanic conspiracy. The Friulian trials, exceptional in their detail, offered what he would later call an "exemplary case"—a fragment of testimony that illuminates broader historical processes.

In a substantial new afterword, Ginzburg reflects on the role of chance discovery in archival research, the dialogue between history and anthropology, and the personal and intellectual forces that shaped his inquiry. Revisiting his own encounter with the voices of the accused, he offers a rare meditation on historical method, perspective, and the moral ambiguities of studying persecution.

Reviews

Reviews

A tour-de-force of reconstruction, building out of scattered and fragmentary sources a whole world for the reader to inhabit.

A work of genuine intellectual distinction. It is an unusually original contribution to the study of witchcraft in early modern Europe, but its importance is far from being exhausted by that description.

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Book Details

Release Date
Publication Date
Status
Preorder
Trim Size
6.125
x
9.25
Pages
256
ISBN
9781421455570
Illustration Description
4 b&w illus.
Table of Contents

Preface to the 2013 Edition
Foreword, by Eric J. Hobsbawm
Translator's Note
Preface to the English Edition
Preface to the Italian Edition
1. The Night Battles
2. The Processions of the Dead
3. The Benandanti

Preface to the 2013 Edition
Foreword, by Eric J. Hobsbawm
Translator's Note
Preface to the English Edition
Preface to the Italian Edition
1. The Night Battles
2. The Processions of the Dead
3. The Benandanti between Inquisitors and Witches
4. The Benandanti at the Sabbat
Afterword: The Night Battles, Fifty Years Later
Appendix
Notes
Index of Names

Author Bios
Carlo Ginzburg
Featured Contributor

Carlo Ginzburg

Carlo Ginzburg has taught at the University of Bologna; the University of California, Los Angeles; and the Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa. The recipient of the 2010 International Balzan Prize, he is the author of The Cheese and the Worms: The Cosmos of a Sixteenth-Century Miller and Clues, Myths, and the Historical Method.