Una relación inquisitorial sobre la brujería navarra

2010 
The witch trials had their greatest social repercussion in the history of Spain during the first half of the 17th century. The most famous of all was that which the Inquisition initiated in Logrono in 1609 against a focal point of witchcraft in Zugarramurdi (Navarre) which unleashed a large wave of witchmania in Navarre and the Basque country which went on until 1614. This procedure gave way furthermore to a lengthy debate within the Inquisition itself about the reality of the phenomenon of witchcraft which pitched credulous inquisitors against the sceptics. The result of this debate �in which the role of the inquisitor Alonso de Salazar was fundamental � meant the end of the persecution of witchcraft by the ecclesiastic authorities and their inhibition in favour of civil justice. The popularity of the Logrono trial, particularly after a witch burning took place in 1610, gave rise to many stories describing the alleged practices and organisation of the socalled �sect of witches�. This article analyses the historical context and meaning of these stories and transcribes one of them which is preserved in the National Historical Archive (Madrid).
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