Andrew Sneddon
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Hutchinson and witchcraft
An historical essay concerning witchcraft (1718)
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This chapter reconsiders the reasons why Francis Hutchinson condemned witchcraft trials in the Historical essay. It is generally agreed by historians of the subject that witchcraft trials in England were sporadic, trying the crimes of individuals or very small groups, and very likely to end in acquittal. The chapter provides a literary critique of the Historical essay, ascertaining how it was constructed and how it works as a text. According to Dr Ian Bostridge, Hutchinson had to wait until 1718 to publish the Historical essay, when witchcraft had become a marginal concern to mainstream, educated culture. Hutchinson may have used the arguments and methodology of witchcraft sceptics and opponents of enthusiasm in the Historical essay, but he nonetheless made deliberate parallels between his book and Sir Issac Newton's Principia Mathematica. It was typical of Newtonian Latudinarians to try to bolster Whig social and cultural ideology by reference to Newtonian science.

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Witchcraft and Whigs

The life of Bishop Francis Hutchinson, 1660–1739

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