![]() ![]() ![]() Thomas provides fascinating insights into the origins of folk sayings and prevalent myths, as well as the prominence of horoscopes and star-gazing, which were used to learn the most auspicious day to do anything from setting out on a journey to having one’s tooth pulled. Religion and the Decline of Magic is a footnote lover’s dream, with copious citations of period sources and later commentaries woven into the text. This mundane kind of magic was often an integral part of daily life in pre-Reformation England, and the changes in English society that took place between 15 soon meant that magic, in the traditional sense, would fade into little more than the folk sayings and superstition that remain with familiar today. Any serious attempt to change or determine the course of one’s life through supernatural means would fall under Thomas’s definition of magic. Magic, in this sense, was not necessarily the magic of evil witchcraft - maleficium, as it tended to be known in those days - but rather the span of the occult and esoteric that ranges from astrology and horoscopes to Christian prayers for the sick. Keith Thomas’s book is a classic study of the effect that the social and religious upheavals of the Reformation had on traditional folk beliefs in England - the ‘magic’ of which he speaks. Religion and the Decline of Magic by Keith Thomas I thought my review of this was longer, but I think it says pretty much all of what I wanted to say about this very good book. ![]()
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