[We have the following announcement from our friends at the Max Planck Institute for European Legal History.]
Christopher Lattmann, Der Teufel, die Hexe und der Rechtsgelehrte. Crimen magiae und Hexenprozess in Jean Bodins De la Démonomanie des Sorciers (Studien zur europäischen Rechtsgeschichte 318) Frankfurt am Main: Klostermann 2019. 390 p., 69,00 €, ISBN 978-3-465-04389-8
Jean Bodin is known above all as the author of the Six livres de la République (1576) and the founder of the theory of sovereignty. Most modern readers,
however, are less familiar with his demonology of 1580, which was also a
bestseller at the time - not least because witchcraft law was hardly
standardised in early modern France. In De la Démonomanie des Sorciers
(1580), Bodin discussed the nature of witchcraft and gave instructions
for the strict legal prosecution of the crimen magiae. Christopher
Lattmann's study is the first to provide a detailed examination of this
controversial legal work from the perspective of legal history. Bodin
understood witchcraft as a phenomenon that resulted from the interaction
of God, devil and man. His view of the world is reflected in his
material witchcraft law, above all in his treatment of the various
witchcraft offences: from entering into a pact with the devil to
participating in the Witches' Sabbath or using maleficent magic.
Lattmann demonstrates the influences of Mosaic, Roman and ecclesiastical
law as well as of contemporary demonology on Bodin's work. Against the
background of French criminal procedural law, he shows that Bodin
established a special summary procedure for witch trials that differed
from the regular inquisition procedure. Since Bodin could not base
himself on any existing French law for this purpose, he drew on the
doctrines of foreign criminal jurists. Lattmann thus shows how Bodin's
work originated in a European legal sphere and became an important
contribution to European criminal law in the 16th century.
–posted by Dan Ernst