There's something about great change that brings out the dark side in people. The worst time to be a witch wasn't in the so-called Dark Ages, or even the Middle Ages. The worst time to be a witch was from 1400-1700, i.e., during the Renaissance, Reformation, and the first Scientific Revolution. It was as if all that new knowledge, new ideas, new applications, new procedures, new stuff, scared everyone so much that they had to run out and kill some people just to prove that everything was the way it always had been, world without end, Amen.
Anyway, during that time over 100,000 people were prosecuted all over Europe and colonial America, and 60,000 were executed, most of them women. (The exception was Iceland where, for some reason, the majority were men.) Why women?
(3) Ageism. Many of the supposed witches were old women. Old women have always gotten terrible press, and still do. Women are supposed to stay young and beautiful and sexy, and when they don't, and get wrinkled and bent and gray and toothless, no one wants them around. Especially if they get crabby with it. (And no wonder they get crabby...) Today they're told it's their own damn fault they're so unsightly. In the 17th century, they could get burned.
But what I find most interesting about the whole literature of witchcraft is this: the reports of the witches' sabbaths and the behavior of the devil are all strikingly similar to the reports of current-day alien abductions. The narrative is largely the same: Abduction/seduction (which usually takes place at night, in a remote area, away from other people), levitation/flight, strange but humanoid figures, a place (witches' circle or spaceship) and a ceremony, probing with cold instruments (please use multiple definitions of this word) here, there, and everywhere (there is a real obsession with genitalia), inexplicable paralysis, inexplicable time lapses, the bewildered return, the strange places on the body that either experience a chronic ache or no feeling whatsoever, the post-event depression and/or confusion - it's all the same. True, the devils of that time looked completely different from the aliens of modern times, but people in the 1400-1700's in widely disparate countries described the devils and demons pretty much exactly the same, just as people in modern times in disparate countries describe aliens pretty much exactly the same. (In neither group is anyone seeing, say, a pink rhinoceros with tentacles.) I repeat: The narrative is the same, in character and plot. Only the costuming changes.
So, what's going on? Is this an interesting reaction to times of great scientific and social change in people who are (more or less) fragile and disturbed to begin with? Is this Carl Jung's collective unconscious? Is this what happens when forbidden desires, despair, frustration, alcohol and/or drugs, hormones, and/or sleep paralysis, combine? Or is this really happening, and all that's happened is that the devil had changed his look? Or have the aliens changed theirs?
Just something to mull over in those late night hours. Pleasant dreams.