Question of Witchcraft Debated

John WAGSTAFFE

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Question of Witchcraft Debated

“ONE OF THE VERY FEW OPEN ATTACKS UPON WITCH BELIEFS IN ITS PERIOD”: THE QUESTION OF WITCHCRAFT DEBATED, 1671

WAGSTAFFE, John. The Question of Witchcraft Debated. Or a Discourse Against their Opinion that Affirm Witches, Considered and Enlarged. London: Edward Millington, 1671. 12mo, contemporary full mottled brown calf.

Second edition, greatly expanded, of this vigorous critique of the belief in witches, citing much extant information on 17th-century and earlier witchcraft.

Wagstaffe’s “most famous work was his Question of Witchcraft Debated (1669). This offered a robust critique of the belief in witchraft, appealing to reason and invoking sarcasm to make his case that the power of witches was illusory… Wagstaffe’s book was attacked by one R.T. in a book entitled The Opinion of Witchcraft Vindicated and by veteran scholar Meric Causabon… both of whom asserted a more traditional view of the subject. The result was that in 1671 Wagstaffe brought out a greatly extended second edition of his book. In it he elaborated his case and, in his preface, defended himself against the ‘ridiculous slander’ that he was an ‘atheist…The importance of Wagstaffe’s work as one of the very few open attacks on witch beliefs in its period is illustrated by the fact that it was twice reprinted in the early 18th century, first in 1712 as part of the controversy over the conviction as a witch and subsequent pardoning of Jan Wenham and then in 1736 in connection with the repeal of the Witchcraft Act; in each case it provided the sole exposition of a strongly skeptical viewpoint” (DNB). Much information on witchcraft is cited throughout the text. Early Latin gothic type pages have been used as endpapers (a not untypical practice for the period). Early owner signature on title page.

Text trimmed a bit close, not affecting text. A very nice copy.

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