ABSTRACT

During the last two decades a number of historians have attempted to establish a causal relationship between the great European witch hunt of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and the development of the modern state. These scholars have claimed that 'the rise of the nationstate' is at the very least one of the secondary causes of the witch hunt; I that the hunt resulted from the centralisation of royal power;2 that it is one reflection of the advance of public authority against 'particularism';3 that it is integrally related to the assertion of reason of state;4 and that it proceeds from an impulse towards both absolutism and state sovereignty.5 The general impression one gets from this line of argument is that witches were in a certain sense victims of the advance of that emerging leviathan, the centralised. bureaucratised, secularised modern state. The purpose of this chapter is to examine this line of argument and to suggest some limitations to it. It will also test some of these theories about the connection between state-building and witch hunting with reference to one country in which it is alleged that they are especially apparent, the kingdom of Scotland.