Before the Fire Burns: Trials for Superstition, Magic, and Witchcraft in Sixteenth-Century Bologna †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Bishop against Superstition: The Trials of 1556–1557
“Sometimes I sleep with her, but last night […] she was sick […] and I couldn’t fuck her, and maybe the last time I fucked her I attacked her with syphilis, because a few days ago I fucked a woman who attacked me with syphilis, and then I fucked Veronica, since I didn’t realize I was infected”.12
“I come to you, O sweet crucified one, just as my heart is slow and sad; just as you consoled Martha and Mary, just as you set the three Magi on the right path, direct the heart and mind of Master Giovanni Maria toward me Isabella; so that he loves me when he sees me, and desires me when he does not see me, O holy cross, grant this request of mine”.15
“Ground, ground, the hoe and the shovel strike you and death destroys you. So may be destroyed the heart, mind and five senses of Master John Mary as the corpse under the ground does, until he comes to me and does what I want him to do”.18
“She [Innocenza] made a ‘hammer’ by pouring lead into a vessel, and when the lead is molten she pricks it with a black-handled knife and these words are said, ‘As, te trapas […]23
against the sea, podestà, captain, five devils, for the love of Pellegrina, must depart and go to the heart of Francesco, take from him five ounces of blood; three keep them in payment and two let them leave him; let them serve her well, that she will pay you well on behalf of her great devil’”.24
“‘I pierce you and I don’t pierce you, but I pierce Francesco’s heart and mind, penis and five senses in the name of his great devil’; and that molten lead is thrown into a basin where there is running water and urine of the person who ordered the spell. When I did it, I put my urine in it”.25
“I woke up at three o’clock, went to the sky of the dead, looked eastward, and saw Messer Francesco with all his people, and said, ‘Where the devil are you going, and where the devil are you coming from?’ […] ‘I come to you, Pellegrina, who stole my heart and bound my sleep’, yes as this is true and not a lie, so let the sleep of messer Francesco be bound”.26
“I want you to tell me the curses (malefici) your sister cast on that child”.35
“I, Giacoma, wife of Michele Rodolfini da Cento, confess to you reverend father vicar of the reverend inquisitor of Bologna and to you lord vicar of the very reverend bishop of Bologna, that I believe all that the Holy Roman Church believes, and I abjure all heresies that go against the Church, of whose errors you regard me as gravely suspected for the incantations and invocations to the devil and for the works of necromancy which I have done and taught, and I oblige myself for the future to suffer the penalty of relapses into heresy, if I do these things again”.39
“Sir, if you find that I have done anything to my husband before I married him, treat me worse than how Giacoma was treated, who last morning was put astride the donkey, or Ravanella, who was burned […]. No, Sir, I don’t know anything, if you find that I do, let me ride the donkey […]. If you find that I know, make me the worst you know”.42
“Lady Saint Helena, who went behind the sea, sought the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ, found it and rested, bread, onion and salt you ate, and the Lord Jesus Christ came and said, ‘What are you doing, Helena?’ ‘Lord, I rested, bread, onion and salt I ate’”.43
“I do not burn salt or grass, but the heart and mind and five senses of N., in the name of his great devil”.44
“The lord Jesus Christ is up, the friar is prepared, the altar is set, the book is opened, so I pray to the lord Jesus Christ that he will open Hannibal’s heart toward me and my daughter”.50
“What are you doing here Martha, watching the dead man? Indeed, I am that Martha who kindles and warms the living man, so I want to pray to you, Martha, that for the sake of this blessed mother and her most holy son, that you would give me the grace to bring peace, love, faith and charity, as Jesus Christ did in the holy trinity, so will God and the sweet Virgin Mary, amen”.53
“I do not buy this egg, but I buy the discord and malevolence of such and such, that they may never love each other except as Cain and Abel did”.55
3. From Love Magic to Witchcraft: The 1559 Trials
4. Conclusions: After the Bonfires
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | |
2 | |
3 | On Gentile Budrioli (or Cimieri) Tavuzzi (2007, pp. 115–17); Dall’Olio (2008, pp. 1099–100); Herzig (2011, pp. 1047–51); on the three fugitive Mirandola sorcerers Dall’Olio (2007, p. 29). The case was entrusted jointly to the Vicelegate and the inquisitor of Bologna. The sentences were carried out in 1525, but it is unclear whether in Modena or Bologna; on these trials Pico [1523] (1989, pp. 9–41 and 217–22) (foreword and appendix by Albano Biondi); on Ravanella, whose trial was held in Ferrara, Dall’Olio (2008, p. 1116). |
4 | Superstition and the devil have always been linked in the thinking of Christian theologians since at least St. Augustine. Significantly, one of the most important texts in the foundation of the concept of witchcraft, the so-called Canon Episcopi, is, in fact, a treatise against superstition. |
5 | See the entry on Campeggi in the Dizionario biografico degli italiani, by Prosperi (1974) and Dall’Olio (1999, pp. 191–207). He was certainly a reformer, yet the sources do not show any direct evidence from which the bishop’s particular interest in the suppression of witchcraft is apparent. |
6 | Of the remaining thirteen, five were released on bail, while the fate of eight of them is unknown. |
7 | In most of the cases, “perpetual” imprisonment meant that the condemned person had to stay in prison for three years. See, e.g., Tedeschi (1979, p. 4, now in Tedeschi (1991)). |
8 | However, this is not exceptional; already, the Malleus Maleficarum devoted several pages to love magic; Kramer (2003, pp. 240–55 (I,7) and 542–49 (II/2, 3)). Wolfgang Behringer, editor of this edition, noted that the trials held by Heinrich Kramer in Innsbruck in 1485 frequently dealt with love magic. The best exposition on the subject remains that of Duni (1999, pp. 183–208), with extensive exemplification (relating to Modena in the first half of the sixteenth century). According to Richard Kieckhefer, in the late Middle Ages, love magic was particularly common in Italy; Kieckhefer (1976, p. 57). See also O’Neil (1987); Bailey (2007, p. 82); Black (2009, pp. 250–52). On the attitude of secular and religious authorities in Bologna toward the “deviant” sexuality of women, see Ferrante (1987). |
9 | On the differences and similarities between rural and urban witchcraft, Levack (2006, pp. 134–74); see also Thomas [1971] (1973, p. 628 ff. (chapter 16.4)). |
10 | Many of the spells and rituals described below, for example, are found, with few variations, in the Bolognese inquisitorial trials of the second half of the seventeenth century; Mazzone and Pancino (2008). On the European dissemination of historiolae, see below, n. 16. |
11 | Kieckhefer (2022, pp. 208–12); Parmeggiani (2017, 2018); for the eighteenth century, Dall’Olio (2008, pp. 1136–38). |
12 | “Io ci dormo tal volta, ma hieri sera […], per che era amalata, […] io non la potete chiavare, […] et dubito ancor che l’ultima volta ch’io usai con lei de non li havere attachato li taroli, per che a giorni passati io chiavai una femina quale me attachò li taroli, et usai di poi con detta Veronica, non mi sendo accorto di essi taroli”. |
13 | The very brief trial against Veronica in Archivio Generale Arcivescovile di Bologna (AAB), Foro Arcivescovile, Sgabello VI, n. 2 (Barbadori Francesco, mazzo II), 7 October–1 November 1555. |
14 | These details emerge from Isabella’s interrogatories, ibid, atto no. 17 (“Contra Isabellam uxorem magistri Joannis Andree barberii”, 10 June–14 July 1556, the document from which the following quotations come, where not otherwise indicated. |
15 | “Io vengo da te, o dolce crocifisso, così come il mio cuore è lento e triste; così come hai consolato Marta e Maria, come hai messo i tre Magi sulla via giusta, orienta il cuore e la mente di maestro Giovanni Maria verso di me Isabella; che mi ami quando mi vede, che mi desideri quando non mi vede, o santa croce, esaudisci questa mia richiesta”. |
16 | In general, on the superstitious prayers, Fantini (1996, 1999), the latter article contains a very large repertory; Caravale (2003); In particular on historiolae: De Martino [1959] (1995, pp. 71–74); Duni (1999, pp. 187–88); Roveri (2003–2004, pp. 193–46); Cameron (2010, pp. 51–56); Bozóky (2013); on the proposed classification, Agapkina and Toporkov (2013). |
17 | The malefic aspects of love magic have been emphasized by Kieckhefer (1976, p. 57; 2022, p. 99); Duni (2007, p. 41) |
18 | “Terra, terra, la zappa e il badile ti colpiscono e la morte ti distrugge. Così si possano distruggere il cuore, la mente e i cinque sensi di maestro Giovanni Maria come fa il cadavere sotto terra, finché egli non venga da me e faccia quello che voglio io”. |
19 | Another Bolognese example in AAB, Ricuperi Attuariali, reg. 249, cc. 53r-64r (trial against Bartolomea Brighenti, June 1567); a similar practice in Cardini (1989), 137 (trial against Gostanza da Libbiano, 1594); Black (2009, pp. 248–49). But measuring with fingers could also have been a way of summoning the devil; Zanelli (1992, p. 106); abundant examples of both uses in Roveri (2003–2004, pp. 25–30). |
20 | |
21 | The trial against Pellegrina in AAB, Foro Arcivescovile, sgabello VI, n. 2 (Barbadori Francesco, mazzo II), file n. 21, “Contra Peregrinam filiam Andree Trombetta curialem” (2–10 July 1556). |
22 | «Mi teneva a sua posta». On the Benedetti family and their activity as booksellers in sixteenth-century Bologna, see De Tata (2021, pp. 64–78) |
23 | One undecipherable word. |
24 | “Lei [Innocenza] fece uno martello quale si fa con scolare del piombo in una mescola, et quando è disfatto se gli ponta dentro con uno coltello che habbia il manico negro et si dicono queste parole, cioè: ‘As, te trapas, […] contra il mare podestà capitanio, per amore della Pellegrina cinqui diavoli si partano, che vadano al cuore di Francesco, et cinque onze di sangue gli cavano, tre se ne tengano in pagamento, et due ne lasci gli, servela bene che ti paga bene al nome del suo gran diavolo’”. |
25 | “‘Io ti foro et non ti foro, ma foro il cuore et la mente, il membro et li cinque sentimenti di Francesco a nome del suo gran diavolo’, et detto piombo disfatto si throw poi in uno cadinello dove sia della acqua coria et della orina di quella persona che fa fare la fare, et quando io la feci gli messi della mia orina”. Cast lead is also mentioned, with similar but also partly different meanings, in other trials; Romano (1996, p. 38). |
26 | “Alle tre hore mi levai, al cielo di morti me ne andai, guardai in verso oriente et vidi messer Francesco con tutta la sua gente, et disse ‘donde diavolo vai, et dove diavolo vienti?’ […]. Io vengo da te Pellegrina che il cuore tu mi hai tolto et il sono tu mi hai legato, sì come le vero et che non è busia, così il sono di messer Francesco con me ligato sia” A very similar prayer was recited by the Modenese Barbara Grafagnina before the inquisitor in 1594; Roveri (2003–2004, p. 242). |
27 | Robbins (1997); Rider (2006), but see Romano (1996, p. 37), in which this charm is similar to that performed by Pellegrina. See also Black (2009, pp. 249–51), that translate the Italian “cordella” with “rope”. |
28 | Roveri (2003–2004, pp. 245–46). On the “army of the dead” and its connection with witchcraft, Ginzburg (1989), 130ff; Ginzburg and Lincoln (2020, p. 52–54). |
29 | In the dialects of northern Italy (especially Lombardy), “cusiliere” meant “spoon”. |
30 | AAB, Foro Arcivescovile, sgabello VI, n. 2 (Barbadori Francesco, mazzo II) file n. 15 (15 July 1556). |
31 | The most important contribution on the use of the magnet is now Tedesco (2016); see also Duni (1999, pp. 193–97); Messana (2007, p. 360); Black (2009, p. 253). On the distinction between “simple” and “heretical” spells, Duni (2007, pp. 15, 34); on the role played by Catholic ritual ibid, 49–51 |
32 | In Italian, this was the so-called “mentita”, that is, the words spoken by a person who wants to challenge his opponent to a duel; see for example Cavina (2022, pp. 43, 49). |
33 | For the Malleus, Kramer (2003, p. 365 (II/1,1)); for the Strix Pico [1523] (1989, p. 139); cf. Duni (1999, pp. 191–92) and Roveri (2003–2004, pp. 33, 42, 105). |
34 | AAB, Foro Arcivescovile, sgabello VI, n. 2 (Barbadori Francesco, mazzo II) file n. 11 (19–20 July 1556). |
35 | “Io voglio che tu mi dica i malefici che tua sorella ha fatto a quel bambino”. |
36 | The chimney, evidently, was a suitable place to invoke the devil. Spanning the chimney hood is a very common practice in Italian inquisitorial trials of the early modern age, often accompanied by the recitation of the rhymed formula: “Five fingers I place on the wall, five devils I avert” (“Cinque dita pongo al muro, cinque diavoli scongiuro”); see, e.g., Mazzone and Pancino (2008, p. 128) and Zanelli (1992, p. 106). |
37 | AAB, Foro Arcivescovile, sgabello VI, n. 2 (Barbadori Francesco, mazzo II), file n. 19, “Contra Juliam filiam magistri Joannis Francisci fabri lignarii”, 16–18 July 1556. |
38 | AAB, Foro Arcivescovile, sgabello VI, n. 2 (Barbadori Francesco, mazzo II), file n. 57. |
39 | “Io Iacoma, moglie de Michele di Rodolfini da Cento, a voi reverendo padre vicario del reverendo inquisitore di Bologna et a voi monsignor vicario de monsignor reverendissimo vescovo di Bologna, con la voce confesso me credere tutto quello che crede la Santa Romana Chiesa, et abiuro ogni heresia contra essa santa romana chiesa, de quali errori voi me havete gravemente suspetta per l’incantationi et invocationi del demonio et opere nigromantice che ho fatto et insegnate, et obligo me stessa per lo avenire, se più caderò in simili cose, per qual appresso di voi son gravemente suspetta di heresia, di cadere nella pena debita alli relapsi in heresia, alla qual pena giuro et protesto me in futuro rendere obligata”; AAB, Miscellanee Vecchie, 917, “Sententia contra dominam Iacobam uxorem Michaelis de Rodolfinis de Cento”. The iron cage outside the convent of San Domenico was placed by inquisitor Leandro Alberti in 1537 to prevent penitent heretics from being stoned to death by children; Dall’Olio (2007, p. 31). |
40 | He held this office from 1553 to 1558. See Dall’Olio (1999, pp. 205–6). |
41 | |
42 | “Signor, si voi trovati mai ch’io habbia fatto cosa nissuna a mio marito innanti ch’io lo pigliasse o doppo, fatemi peggio che non si fecie alla Jacoma, che si mese l’altra matina a cavallo dell’asino, o alla Ravanella, che fu abrusiata […]. Signor no mi, non ne so niente, se trovate ch’io lo sapia, fatemi andare a cavallo del asino […]. Quando trovati ch’io lo sapia, fatemi il peggio che sapeti”. |
43 | “Madonna Santa Lena, che drieto al mare vevi andvi, la croce di messer Jesu Christo la cercavi, tanto che la cercassi, tanto che la trovassivi, e ve repossasevi, pane, poro e sale che a mangiasevi, e ne arivò messer Jesu Christo et disse: ‘Che fate, Lena?’ ‘Signor, me repossava’, pano, poro e sale ch io mangiava”. This too, with many variations, is a common prayer in inquisitorial trials; e.g., Martin (1989, pp. 121–24); Fantini (1999, pp. 623–24); Roveri (2003–2004, pp. 219–20). In appropriately purged versions, it is still found among contemporary Catholics; see, e.g., https://www.preghiereperlafamiglia.it/sant-elena.htm (accessed on 3 September 2024); Gala Pellicer (2015). |
44 | “Io non brucio sale né saina, ma il core e la mente e i cinque sentimenti del N. al nome del suo gran diavolo”; the herb “saina” is probably a variety of juniper (Juniperus Sabina), which is highly toxic and whose extract was often used as an abortive drug. |
45 | AAB, Foro Arcivescovile, sgabello VI, n. 1 (Barbadori Francesco, mazzo I), file n. 63, “Contra dominam Helisabettam Busolam” (28 August–4 September 1556). |
46 | “Ho inteso che lei è una donna che fa qualche volta a piacere”. |
47 | A native of Siena, Colombino had been governor of Foligno in 1554–1555; he was then auditor of Rota in Bologna and died in Naples; Weber (1994, p. 258). |
48 | “et delle orationi da constringere li spiriti et al.tre cose da metere in gratia et in disgratia”. |
49 | On the prayer of St. Daniel Fantini (Fantini 1999, pp. 613–15); the “nomi del ben volere” are mentioned in a catalog of superstitions by Rodolfo Paleotti, bishop of Imola (1611–1619); see Zanelli (1992, p. 107). |
50 | “Messer Iesu Christo è levato el frate è apparato, l’altare è aparechiato, il libro aperto, cussì prego messer Iesu Christo che apra il cor de Hanibal verso de mia figliola et de mi”. |
51 | Fantini (1996, 1999, pp. 620–22); the versions reported by Fantini are longer and more elaborate than those transcribed here. |
52 | |
53 | “Che fai qui Marta, che l’homo morto guarda? Anci, son quella Marta che l’homo vivo accendo e riscaldo, cussì te voglio pregare, Marta, che per amore di questa madre benedetta et del suo santissimo figliolo che me debbi prestare gratia de mettere pace, amore et fede et carità como fe’ messer Iesu Christo in la Santa Trinità, voglia Dio et la dolce vergine Maria, amen”. |
54 | “Si piglia tri picigotti de sale et si getano suso il foco, et a ogni picigotto se dice: ‘O sal de sapientia, che in man strenzo, cusì possa stringere il core di N. verso di me, che mi possa amare et bramare come fece la dolce Vergine Maria il suo figliolo caro, cussì como Dio fece il ciel, la terra et il mare, cussì possa fare che costui mi voglia bene et non mi voglia male’. Et questo l’ho fatto per Cesare del quale era gravida, et questo me lo insegnò una dona che ha nome Lucia, moglie de un chiodarollo”. [“Si prendono tre pizzichi di sale e si gettano sul fuoco, e ad ogni pizzico si dice ‘O sale di sapienza che stringo in mano, così si possa stringere il cuore di N. verso di me, che possa amarmi e desiderarmi come fece la dolce Vergine Maria col suo caro figlio, così come Dio creò il cielo, la terra e il mare, così possa egli volermi bene e non volermi male’. E ho fatto questo rito per Cesare, del quale ero gravida, me l’ha insegnato una donna di nome Lucia, moglie di un chiodaiolo”]. |
55 | “Non compro questo ovo, ma compro la discordia e la malivolentia del tale et della tale che non si possano mai volere bene se non come fece Caino et Abello”. |
56 | Still in the second half of the 17th century, Borgo dell’Ariente was an infamous area frequented by prostitutes and sorceresses; Mazzone and Pancino (2008, p. 93). |
57 | |
58 | AAB, Foro Arcivescovile, Sgabello II, n. 10 (Cesare Belliossi, mazzo V/1), “Ex officio contra Annam Teutonicam” (5–19 September 1556). |
59 | Ibid, contra Cassandra Bertucci (23–24 September 1556); AAB, Ricuperi Attuariali, f. 152, fasc. “Contra mulieres de Butrio” (21–22 March 1557); ibid, fasc. “Franciscae Zampettae” (3 May–25 August 1557). |
60 | “Alessandro mi disse che la detta Isabetta havea fatto delle malie al detto maestro Alessandro, et che lui havea vomitato delle agochie”; AAB, Foro arcivescovile, sgabello VI, n. 2 (Barbadori Francesco, mazzo II) file n. 14, 16 luglio 1556. |
61 | E.g., Paulus Grillandus, Tractatus de hereticis et sortilegiis, Lugduni, apud Jacobum Giuncti, 1536, fol. 23r (book 2, § Sortilegia multis fiunt modis, no. 22). |
62 | AAB, Archbishop’s Forum, stool VI, Barbadori Francesco, deck II, deed no. 22, “Processus Camille Cusilieriae” (2–11 July 1556). However, Camilla denied all charges and was eventually released. |
63 | On the connections between lower magic (sorcery) and witchcraft, Kieckhefer (2022, pp. 244–55). |
64 | |
65 | This copy is found, for reasons I don’t know, among the manuscripts of the Bolognese naturalist Ulisse Aldrovandi (Bologna, Biblioteca Universitaria, ms. Aldrovandi, 21/III, cc. 28r-36r). On Aldrovandi’s multiple interests, which nevertheless seem to exclude magic, Olmi (1976) and Tugnoli Pattaro (1981). For other documents we refer entirely to Dall’Olio (2001a). |
66 | BUB, ms. Aldrovandi, 21/III, cc. 28r-v (21 March 1559). Domenica, like other women tried three years earlier, had also undergone a trial. The consequences, however, must have been rather mild, since later the inquisitor wrote to Rome that the defendants had never abjured before. |
67 | Ibid, cc. 29r-v. |
68 | Ibid, c. 30r. |
69 | “Signor no che non è vero, che me l’havete fatto dir per forza!”. |
70 | In other places this kind of torture was known as “cannette” or “sibille”; Black (2009, p. 84) |
71 | Ibid, cc. 30r-v. |
72 | BUB, ms. Aldrovandi, 21/III, c. 30v. |
73 | Ibid, cc. 31r-v. Here again we can see the forcing made by the judge, who was questioning according to a pre-established pattern. Domenica, in fact, had narrated only that she had eaten the meat; it was the judge, after asking her other questions, who asked her what happened to the ox after they had eaten it. Cf. Pico [1523] (1989, p. 122). On this rite see Ginzburg (1989, pp. 206–75). |
74 | “Havea due bechine, et ambedue le adoperava in una volta, in uno et l’altro loco”, c. 31r. The devil’s bifurcated member, an instrument of lust, was present in the confessions of the Valcamonica witches in 1518 and was later present in those of the Milanese witch Caterina de Medici (1616); cf. Muraro (1976, p. 159) and Farinelli and Paccagnini (1989, p. 299). |
75 | Biblioteca Universitaria di Bologna (BUB), ms. Aldrovandi, 21/III, c. 32r (22 March 1559). |
76 | Ibid, cc. 34r-35r (22 and 27 March 1559); (Rezasco 1890). |
77 | Ibid, cc. 35v-36r. |
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AAB, Miscellanee Vecchie, 917, “Sententia contra dominam Iacobam uxorem Michaelis de Rodolfinis de Cento” (August 31, 1556).Archivio Generale Arcivescovile di Bologna (AAB).Biblioteca Universitaria di Bologna (BUB), ms. Aldrovandi, 21/III, cc. 28r-36r.Ibid. file n. 11 [Against Antonia wife of Gabriele the taylor] (July 19–20, 1556).Ibid., file n. 14, [against Elisabetta Piladora] 16 luglio 1556.Ibid., file n. 15 [Against Veronica wife of Domenico Panirani] (July 15, 1556).Ibid., file n. 19, “Contra Juliam filiam magistri Joannis Francisci fabri lignarii”, July 16–18, 1556.Ibid., file n. 21, “Contra Peregrinam filiam Andree Trombetta curialem” (July 2–10, 1556).Ibid., file n. 57 [Against Paola and Giacoma], August 3–22, 1556.Series: Foro Arcivescovile (for the organization of this series, see https://www.archivio-arcivescovile-bo.it/site/wp-content/uploads/Foro-Arcivescovile.pdf, accessed on 3 September 2024).Sgabello II, n. 10 (Cesare Belliossi, mazzo V/1), file “Ex officio contra Annam Teutonicam” (September 5–19, 1556).sgabello VI, n. 1 (Barbadori Francesco, mazzo I), file n. 63, “Contra dominam Helisabettam Busolam” (August 28–September 4, 1556).Sgabello VI, n. 2 (Barbadori Francesco, mazzo II), file n. 5 [Against Veronica Rossi] October 7–November 1, 1555.Secondary Sources
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Dall’Olio, G. Before the Fire Burns: Trials for Superstition, Magic, and Witchcraft in Sixteenth-Century Bologna. Religions 2024, 15, 1111. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15091111
Dall’Olio G. Before the Fire Burns: Trials for Superstition, Magic, and Witchcraft in Sixteenth-Century Bologna. Religions. 2024; 15(9):1111. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15091111
Chicago/Turabian StyleDall’Olio, Guido. 2024. "Before the Fire Burns: Trials for Superstition, Magic, and Witchcraft in Sixteenth-Century Bologna" Religions 15, no. 9: 1111. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15091111
APA StyleDall’Olio, G. (2024). Before the Fire Burns: Trials for Superstition, Magic, and Witchcraft in Sixteenth-Century Bologna. Religions, 15(9), 1111. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15091111