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A witch-hunter's guidebook, written in 1486 by German Dominican monks Jakob Sprenger and Heinrich Kramer, and arguably [one of the most] blood-soaked and hateful books in history. The main purpose of the "Malleus Maleficarum", or "The Hammer Against Witches", was to refute all arguments that witchcraft did not exist, refute those who were skeptical about its reality, to prove that witches were more often women than men, and to [educate] magistrates on the how to find witches and convict them. This book reflects that Sprenger and Kramer not only severely lacked a [sense of humor] and were obsessed with sex, but also that they had major issues with women; the book singles women out as the weaker sex, weaker in faith, lustful and easy by nature, and thus easy prey for Satan's coaxing. The men even went so far as to state the etymology of "femina" (Latin for "woman") as "fe" ("faith") + "minus" ("less"), which it is not. Indeed, the book uses the exclusively feminine "malefica" rather than the masculine (and more inclusive) "maleficus" to denote witches, a strong implication that only women were witches in their eyes. Also, Sprenger and Kramer stated that old women and Jews were most likely witches and should never be trusted. The Malleus Maleficarum accuses witches of [cannibalistic] infanticide, casting evil spells to harm their enemies, and holding the power to steal men’s penises (even make them come to life). It goes on to give accounts of witches committing these crimes. The Malleus also delves deeply into the Bible, astrology, and philosophy, as this book was published during the Renaissance. This whole book is one long tirade not just against women, but also heretics, [independent] thinkers, romantic lovers, the sensitive passions, human sexuality, and compassion. The reasoning and logic used are bewilderingly outlandish... as horrible as the the images and reasoning are, they are also so ridiculous that it would be funny if the subject matter were not so grim. Amazingly, in its day, this book of [intolerance] and persecution was second most popular after the Bible. Thousands of innocents were killed because of Sprenger and Kramer, because of the hysteria and paranoia that they sparked, [eventually] leading to [the Burning Times].
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