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Woman, Church, and State: Woman, Church, and State

Woman, Church, and State
Woman, Church, and State
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Preface
  2. I. The Matriarchate
  3. II. Celibacy
  4. III. Canon Law
  5. IV. Marquette
  6. V. Witchcraft
  7. VI. Wives
  8. VII. Polygamy
  9. VIII. Woman And Work
  10. IX. The Church Of To-Day
  11. X. Past, Present, Future

[←372]

Venitians concluded not unreasonably that the latter ran no more risk from the taint of witchcraft attached to their inheritance than did the clergy or the church. Where profits were all spiritual their ardor soon cooled. Thus it happened as the inevitable result of the peoples attitude in religious matters, that while in Venice there were representatives of the vast sisterhood, which extended from the Blockula of Sweden to the walnut tree of Beneveuto, sorcery there never became the terrible scourge that it was in other lands where its victims at times threatened to outnumber those of the Black Death.--The Witches of Venice.

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