Aug 4, 2011

Witchcraft Bibliography Project - DB10 std.

Adam, Isabel. Witch Hunt: The Great Scottish Witchcraft Trials of 1697.
         London: Macmillan, 1978.

Adams, W. H. D.  Witch, warlock and magician.  Historical sketches of 
 magic and witchcraft in England and Scotland.  London:  n.p., 1889.

Black, George Fraser. A Calendar of Witchcraft Cases in Scotland, 1510-
 1727. New York: New York Public Library, 1938.

___________.  Some Unpublished Scottish Witchcraft Trials. New York:
        New York Public Library, 1941.

Boyd, W. F. "Four and Twenty Blackbirds . . .: More on Ergotism,
 Rye, and Witchcraft in Scotland." Area 27 (1995): 77-79.

Brown, P. H., ed.  Register of the Privy Council of Scotland, 1627-
 1628. Second Series.  2.  Edinburgh: n.p., 1900.

Cameron, Charles. Scottish Witches. 2nd ed. Norwich: Jerrold, 1990.

Campbell, John.  Witchcraft and Second-Sight in the Highlands and 
 Islands of Scotland.  Glasgow:  n.p., 1902.

Carlyle, T.  "Sign of the Times."  Edinburgh Review 59 (1829):  439-59.

Chambers, R.  Domestic Annals of Scotland.  Edinburgh:  n.p., 1861.

Clark, Stuart.  "King James's Daemonologie:  Witchcraft and Kinsghip."  
 In The Damned Art: Essays in the Literature of Witchcraft,
        edited by Sydney Anglo, 156-81. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 
        1977.

Cowan, E. J. "The Darker Version of the Scottish Renaissance:
 The Devil and Francis Stewart." In I. B. Cowan et al., eds.
 The Renaissance and Reformation in Scotland: Essays in
 Honour of Gordon Donaldson. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic
 Press, 1983. 125-40.

        Dunfermline District Libraries, ed. The Seventeenth-Century 
 Witch Craze in West Fife: A Guide to the Printed Sources. 
        Dunferm-line: Dunfermline District Libraries, 1980.

Ferguson, John.  "Bibliographical Notes on the Witchcraft Literature of
        Scotland."  Proceedings of the Edinburgh Bibliographical 
 Society 3 (1899). 

Gilmore, J. "Witchcraft and the Church in Scotland Subsequent to
 the Reformation." Glasgow: Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Glasgow, 1948.

Gow, N. "Of Pricking and Burning Witches: Old Scottish Witchcraft
 Trials." New Law Journal 6814 (1997): 1602-?

Graham, Michael F. "Reformed Discipline and Social Issues: Sexuality,
        Conflict and Witchcraft." Chap. ? of his The Uses of Reform:
        "Godly Discipline" and Popular Behavior in Scotland and
        Beyond, 1560-1610. New York: E. J. Brill, 1996.


__________. The Uses of Reform: "Godly Discipline" and Popular Behavior
        in Scotland and Beyond, 1560-1610.  New York: E.J. Brill, 1996.

 A History of Witches, Ghosts, and Highland Seers:  Containing 
 Many Wonderful Well-attested Relations of Supernatural 
 Appearances.  Not Published Before in any Similar Collection.  
        Designed for the Conviction of the Unbeliever, and the 
        Amusement of the Curious.  Berwick: n.p., 1775.

James VI, King of Scotland; later James I, King of England.  
 Dæmonologie (1597). Edited by G. B. Harrison  Oxford:  Bodley 
        Head, 1924.  London:  John Lane, 1924. New York:  E. P. Dutton, 
        1924.  New York:  Da Capo, 1969.  N.l.:  Godolphine House, 
        1996.   Amsterdam:  Theatrum Orbis Terrarum, 1969.  Also in
        Witchcraft in Early Modern Scotland:  James VI's 'Demonology'
        and the North Berwick Witches, edited by Lawrence Normand and
        Gareth Roberts, page#.  Exeter:  Exeter University Press, 2000.

Keiller, Alexander.  The Personnel of the Aberdeenshire Witchcraft 
 Covens. London:  n.p., 1922.

Lamont-Brown, Raymond. Scottish Witchcraft. Edinburgh: Chambers, 1994.

Larner, Christina.  "James VI and I and Witchcraft."  In Witchcraft and
        Religion, by Christina Larner, edited by Alan Macfarlane, 3-22.
        Oxford and New York:  Basil Blackwell, 1984.
        Originally published in The Reign of James VI and I, edited by
        Alan G. R. Smith, 74-90.  London:  Macmillan, 1973.

_________. "The Crime of Witchcraft in Scotland,"  Witchcraft and 
 Religion: The Politics of Popular Belief  by Christina Larner, 
        edited by Alan Macfarlane, 23-34.  Oxford and New York:  Basil 
        Blackwell, 1984.

__________.  Enemies of God: The Witch Hunt in Scotland. Baltimore:
 Johns Hopkins University Press, 1981. London: Chatto and Windus, 
        1981.Oxford:  Blackwell, 1983.

__________. Scottish Demonology in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth
        Centuries and its Theological Background. Edinburgh:
        Unpublished Ph.D. diss., University of Edinburgh, 1962.

__________.  "Two Late Scottish Witchcraft Tracts:  Witchcraft Proven 
        and The Tryal of Witchcraft."  In The Damned Art: Essays in the 
 Literature of Witchcraft, edited by Sydney Anglo, 227-45. 
        London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1977.

__________, C. H. Lee, and H. V. McLachlan. A Source-Book of Scottish 
 Witchcraft. Glasgow: S.S.R.C. Project on Accusations and 
        Prosecution for Witchcraft in Scotland, 1977.

__________. "Witch Beliefs and Accusations in England and Scotland."
        History Today 31 (1981): 32-36. Repr. in  Witchcraft and
        Religion: The Politics of Popular Belief by Christina Larner,
        edited by Alan Macfarlane, 69-78.  Oxford and New York:  Basil
        Blackwell, 1984.  Originally published in History Today 31 (1981): 32-6.

Legge, F.  "Witchcraft in Scotland." The Scottish Review18 (1891): 257-
        88.

Levack, Brian P. "The Great Scottish Witch Hunt of 1661-1662."
 Journal of British Studies 20 (1980): 90-108.

__________, ed. Witchcraft in Scotland.  Vol. 7 of Brian Levack, ed.
        Articles on Witchcraft, Magic, and Demonology: A Twelve-Volume
        Anthology of Scholarly Articles. 12 vols. New York: Garland, 
        1992.

Lochhead, Marion. Magic and Witchcraft of the Borders. London:
 R. Hale, 1984.

MacCulloch, J. A. "The Mingling of Fairy and Witch Beliefs in Sixteenth 
        and Seventeenth Century Scotland." Folklore: The Transactions 
 of the Folk-Lore Society 32 (1921): 229-44.

Mackenzie, Sir George.  "A Discourse on the Four First Books of the 
        Digest." British Library, Sloane MS. 3828.  Dated 1691.

__________.  The Laws and Customs of Scotland in Matters Criminal.  
        Edinburgh:  Thomas Brown, 1678.

__________.  Pleadings in Some Remarkable Cases.  Edinburgh:  n.p., 
        1672.

__________.  A Vindication of the Government of Scotland during the
        Reign of Charles II.   Edinburgh:  n.p., 1691.

Mackenzie, Sir George.  "A Discourse on the Four First Books of the 
        Digest." British Library, Sloane MS. 3828.  Dated 1691.

__________.  The Laws and Customs of Scotland in Matters Criminal.
        Edinburgh: Thomas Brown, 1678.

__________.  Pleadings in Some Remarkable Cases.  Edinburgh:  n.p., 
        1672.

__________.  A Vindication of the Government of Scotland during the 
 Reign of Charles II.   Edinburgh:  n.p., 1691.

McDonald, S. W. "The Bargarran Witch Trial: A Psychiatric Assessment."
        Scottish Medical Journal 41 (1996): 152-ff.

McKerrow, R. B., ed.  A Dictionary of Printers and Booksellers in 
        England, Scotland and Ireland and Foreign Printers of English 
 Books, 1557-1640. London:  Bibliographical Society, 1910, 1968.

McLachlan, Hugh and J. K. Swales. "Scottish Witchcraft: Myth or 
        Reality?" Contemporary Review 260 (1992): 79-84.

__________. "Stereotypes and Scottish Witchcraft." Contemporary Review
        234 (1979): 88-94.


Melville, R. D. "The Use and Form of Judicial Torture in Scotland."
        Scottish Historical Review 2 (1905): 225-48.

Millar, John.  A History of the Witches of Renfrewshire.  Paisley:
        n.p., 1809.

Murray, George, M. R. {Aptd an Ian Hodkinson,}  "Prestongrage and its 
        painted Ceiling."  Transactions of the East Lothian Antiquarian 
 and Field Naturalists' Society 10 (1966):  page#.

Neill, W. N.  "The Professional Pricker and his Test for Witchcraft."
        Scottish Historical Review 19 (1922):  205-13.

Nelson, George.  "A Sermon on Witchcraft in 1697." Scottish Historical 
 Review 7 (1910), 390-99.

        "Newes from Scotland.  Declaring the Damnable Life and Death of 
        Doctor Fian, a notable sorcerer who was burned at Edenbrough in 
        January last". London:  W. Wright, 1591.  London:  Shakespeare 
        Press, 1816. Included in King James, the First, Daemonologie, 
        edited by George Bagshawe Harrison.  Oxford:  Bodley Head; 
        London: John Lane; New York:  E.P. Dutton, 1924.  New York:  
        Barnes and Noble, 1966.  Also in Witchcraft in England, 1558-
 1618, edited by Barbara Rosen, page#.  Amherst:  University of
        Massachusetts Press, 1969, 1991.  Also in Witchcraft in Early
        Modern Scotland:  James VI's 'Demonology' and the North Berwick
        Witches, edited by Lawrence Normand and Gareth Roberts, page#.
        Exeter:  Exeter University Press, 2000.

Normand, Lawrence, and Gareth Roberts.  Witchcraft in Early Modern 
 Scotland: James VI's 'Demonology' and the North Berwick 
 Witches.  Exeter: Exeter University Press, 2000. Includes the 
        text of "Demonology" and "News from Scotland".

Plomer, Henry R., ed.  A Dictionary of Booksellers and Printers who 
 were at work in England, Scotland and Ireland, 1641-1667.  
        London: Bibliographical Society, 1907, 1968.

Pollard, A. W. and G. R. Redgrave, comps.  A Short-Title Catalogue of 
 Books Printed in England, Scotland and Ireland . . . 1475-1667.  
        2nd ed,. revised by W. A. Jackson, F. S. Ferguson, and 
        Katherine F. Pantzer. 3 vols.  London:  Bibliographical 
        Society, 1986-91.

Roberts, Gareth and Lawrence Normand.  Witch Hunting in Early Modern 
 Scotland: King James' "Daemonologie" and the North Berwick 
 Witches.  Exeter: Exeter University Press, 2000.

Roughead, William.  "The Witches of North Berwick."  In The Riddle of 
 the Ruthvens and Other Essays, edited by Name, 144-66.  New ed.
        Edinburgh:  Moray Press, 1936.

Scott, Sir Walter.  Witchcraft Letters Addressed to J. G. Lockhart, 
 Esq. New York:  n.p., 1970.

Scott, Walter.  Minstrely of the Scottish Border.  2 vols.  Kelso:  
        n.p., 1802.


Scottish Record Office.  JC 2/14.  Books of Adjournal of the High Court 
 of the Justiciary, 1673-8.  Edinburgh:  the Office, 1674.

__________.  JC 2/15.  Books of Adjournal of the High Court of the
        Justiciary, 1678-82.  Edinburgh:  the Office, 1680.

Scott-Moncrieff, W. G., ed.  Proceedings of the Justiciary Court from 
 1661 to 1678.  Scottish History Society, 48.  N.l.:  the 
        Society, 1905.

Seth, Ronald. In the Name of the Devil: Great Scottish Witchcraft 
 Cases. London: Jarrolds, 1969.

Sharpe, Charles K. Historical Account of the Belief in Witchcraft in 
 Scotland. London and Glasgow: n.p., 1894.

Stafford, Helen.  "Notes on Scottish Witchcraft Cases, 1590-91."
 In Norton Downs, ed. Essays in Honor of Conyers Read. Chicago:
 University of Chicago Press, 1953. 96-118.

Truckell, A. E.  "Unpublished Witchcraft Trials."  Dumfriesshire and
        Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian Society  51-52
        (1975-6):  48-58, 95-108.

 A True Narrative of the Sufferings and Relief of a Young Girl.
        Edinburgh:  n.p., 1698.

 A True and Full Relation of the Witches of Pitenweem.  
        Edinburgh: n.p., 1704.

Wasser, M. and L. Yeoman, eds.  "The Trial of Geillis Johnstone for
        Witchcraft 1614."  Miscellany 4th series.  Scottish Historical
        Society.  Issue (1998):  page#.

Webster, David, ed.  Collection of Rare and Curious Tracts on 
 Witchcraft and Second Sight.  Edinburgh:  n.p., 1820.


Whyte, Ian D. "Ergotism and Witchcraft in Scotland." Area 26
 (1994): 89-90.

Wormald, J. "The Witches, the Devil, and the King." In T. Brotherstone
        and D. Ditchburn, eds. Scotland: The History of the Medieval
        Nation: Essays Presented to Grant G. Simpson. Edinburgh:
        University of Edinburgh Press, 1995.


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