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Witchcraft and Whigs

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The first detailed account of the life and work of Bishop Francis Hutchinson (1660-1739), author of one of the most important witchcraft texts of the early modern period, An historical essay concer...
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  • 31 October 2014
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This ground-breaking biography of Bishop Francis Hutchinson (1669–1739) provides a detailed and rare portrait of an early eighteenth century Irish bishop and witchcraft theorist. Drawing upon a wealth of printed primary source material, the book aims to increase our understanding of the eighteenth-century established clergy, both in England and Ireland. It illustrates how one of the main sceptical texts of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the Historical essay concerning witchcraft (1718), was constructed and how it fitted into the wider intellectual and literary context of the time, examining Hutchinson’s views on contemporary debates concerning modern prophecy and miracles, demonic and Satanic intervention, the nature of Angels and hell, and astrology.

This book will be of particular interest to academics and students of history of witchcraft, and the religious, political and social history of Britain and Ireland in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.

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Price: £25.00
Pages: 236
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 31 October 2014
ISBN: 9780719096785
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

HISTORY / Europe / Ireland, European history, RELIGION / Wicca (see also BODY, MIND & SPIRIT / Witchcraft), Witchcraft

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Preface
Introduction
PART I – England
1. Childhood and early career, 1660-c.1690
2 . The national church in a Suffolk parish, St. James’, Bury St. Edmunds, 1692-1720
3. ‘A well affected man’: Hutchinson and party politics, 1700-20
4. Angels and demons: the mental world of an eighteenth-century Anglican pastor.
5. Hutchinson and witchcraft: An historical essay concerning witchcraft (1718)
PART II - Ireland
6. The bishop of Down and Connor and the established Church and state in Ireland, 1721-39
7. ‘Darkness must be expell’d by bringing in the light’: the conversion of Irish Catholics, c.1721-34
8. ‘Improve everything that is improveable’: the social, economic, and cultural ‘improvement’ of Ireland and the Irish, 1721-39
Conclusion
Index