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An uncompromising chronicle of power, fear and law at a decisive turning point in German history. Dark forces shaped public life. Johannes Janssen’s Volume XVI of History of the German People at the Close of the Middle Ages confronts moral and religious corruption across the Holy Roman Empire, the imperial legislation against witchcraft, and the expansion of witch persecution from the church schism era into the last third of the sixteenth century. As a rigorous historical nonfiction book, it combines lucid narrative with meticulous archival evidence, serving as both religious corruption analysis and witchcraft persecution study. Readers of medieval european history, scholars engaged in witch trials research, and those in early modern europe studies will find sources and interpretation vital to understanding legal, social and ecclesiastical change.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Its literary and historical significance is unmistakable: Janssen frames the moral decline middle ages as more than background, showing how doctrinal schism and imperial law shaped everyday accusation and punishment. That perspective makes the work excellent academic history readers’ reference and dependable university course material on witchcraft persecution and sixteenth century europe, while its clear prose and moral urgency will draw curious general readers. Collectors of classic literature will appreciate a restored, readable text that bridges specialist witchcraft persecution study and broader narrative history, illuminating a fraught passage from medieval to early modern Europe.