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{{Short description|Branch of magical practice, topos in literature and art}}
{{Short description|Type of magic focused on relationships}}
{{for|the album|Love Magic}}
{{Redir|Love charm|the 1921 film|The Love Charm}}
{{Redir|Love charm|the 1921 film|The Love Charm}}
{{Tone|date=September 2009}}
{{Tone|date=September 2009}}
[[File:Der Liebeszauber by Niederrheinischer Meister.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Painting from the lower Rhine, 1470–1480, showing love magic, collection of [[Museum der bildenden Künste]]]]
{{Love sidebar}}
{{Love sidebar}}
https://www.Lovesspells.com


'''Love magic''' was an ancient belief that [[Magic (supernatural)|magic]] can conjure sexual passion or [[romantic love]]. Love magic motifs are often used in [[literature]], such as fantasy or mythology. It is believed that it can be implemented in a variety of ways, such as by written spells, dolls, charms, [[amulet]]s, [[potion]]s, or rituals. It is attested to on [[cuneiform]] tablets from the ancient [[Near East]], in [[ancient Egypt]]ian texts, in the [[Ancient Greece|Greco]]-[[Ancient Rome|Roman]] world, the [[Middle Ages]], and up to the present day.
'''Love magic''' is a type of [[Magic (supernatural)|magic]] that has existed or currently exists in many cultures around the world as a part of folk beliefs, both by clergy and laity of nearly every religion. Historically, it is attested on [[cuneiform]] tablets from [[Mesopotamia]], in [[Ancient Egypt|ancient Egyptian]] texts and later Coptic texts, in the [[Ancient Greece|Greco]]-[[Ancient Rome|Roman]] world, in [[Syriac alphabet|Syriac]] texts, in the European [[Middle Ages]] and early modern period, and among all Jewish groups who co-existed with these groups.


The exact definition of what constitutes "love magic" can be difficult to establish and will vary from scholar to scholar, but a common theme shared by many is the use of magic to start, preserve, or break up a relationship of some type whether for purely [[sexual intercourse|sexual]] or [[romantic love|romantic purposes]] or both. The tools and methods used in its practice do not significantly differ from the way other forms of magic are practiced and include spoken and written [[spells and incantations]], dolls, [[talisman]]s, [[amulet]]s, [[Love potion|potions]], and [[ritual]]s.
== Ancient love magic in Cuneiform ==
Early examples love magic may derive from the ancient Near East, dating to ca. 2200 BCE. Cuneiform tablets preserving rituals of erotic magic have been uncovered at Tell Inghara and Isin (present-day Iraq).<ref name="R. Pientka, ‘Aphrodisiaka und Liebeszauber im Alten Orient’, in S. Parpola and R.M. Whiting (eds.), ''Sex and Gender in the Ancient Near East'' (2 vols; Helsinki, 2002), vol. II, pp. 507-522.">R. Pientka, ‘Aphrodisiaka und Liebeszauber im Alten Orient’, in S. Parpola and R.M. Whiting (eds.), ''Sex and Gender in the Ancient Near East'' (2 vols; Helsinki, 2002), vol. II, pp. 507-522.</ref> Similar rituals are attested in ancient Egypt for instance on an ostracon dated to the twentieth dynasty (twelfth-eleventh centuries BCE).<ref name="J.F. Borghouts, ''Ancient Egyptian Magical Texts'' (Leiden, 1978), p. 1.">[[Joris Borghouts|J.F. Borghouts]], ''Ancient Egyptian Magical Texts'' (Leiden, 1978), p. 1.</ref>


As most surviving sources concern love between men and women, there is a strong heterosexual bias when discussing these sources, though there are a few examples known to concern love between both two men and two women, such as Greek [[curse tablet]]s.
== Hellenistic love magic ==
Love magic [[Motifs in mythology|motifs]] appear in [[literature]] and [[art]] and in the [[mythology|mythologies]] of many cultures. It is less likely to occur in modern fiction, except in [[fantasy fiction]] (like ''[[Harry Potter]]''), though even then it is not common and may be portrayed as negative.
Spells of erotic attraction and compulsion are found within the [[Magic in the Greco-Roman world|syncretic magic tradition]] of [[Hellenistic Greece]], which incorporated [[Ancient Egyptian religion|Egyptian]] and [[Magic in the Greco-Roman world#Jewish tradition|Hebraic]] elements, as documented in texts such as the [[Greek Magical Papyri]] and archaeologically on [[amulet]]s and other artifacts dating from the 2nd century BC (and sometimes earlier) to the late 3rd century A.D. These magical practices continued to influence private rituals in [[Gaul]] among Celtic peoples, in [[Roman Britain]], and among [[Germanic peoples]].<ref name="p. 52ff">For example, J.H.G. Grattan and Charles Singer, ''Anglo-Saxon Magic and Medicine. Illustrated Specially from the Semi-Pagan Text Lacnunga'' (Oxford University Press, 1952); Felix Grendon, ''Anglo-Saxon Charms'' (Folcroft Library, 1974), ''passim'' (mostly on Christian elements and traditional magic); Anne van Arsdall, ''Medieval Herbal Remedies: The'' Old English Herbarium ''and Anglo-Saxon Medicine'' (Routledge, 2002), [https://books.google.com/books?id=ITxsaqEmVHAC&dq=%22anglo-saxon+magic%22&pg=PA53 p. 52ff.], with cautions about disentangling various strands of the magical tradition; Karen Louise Jolly, "Locating the Charms: Medicine, Liturgy, and Folklore," in ''Popular Religion in Late Saxon England'' (University of North Caroline Press, 1996), [https://books.google.com/books?id=P7LqtqbohIsC&dq=%22glimpse+into+the+intermingling%22+intitle:Late+intitle:Saxon+intitle:England+inauthor:Jolly&pg=PA96 p. 96ff.]</ref> Erotic magic reflected gender roles in ancient Greece and dismissed{{Clarify|date=September 2009}} modern conceptions about gender roles and sexuality. Christopher Faraone, a University of Chicago Classics professor specializing in texts and practices pertaining to magic, distinguishes between the magic of ''[[eros]]'', as practiced by men, and the magic of ''[[philia]]'', practiced by women.<ref name="Paul C. Rosenblatt, pg. 482">Paul C. Rosenblatt, pg. 482.</ref>


== Ancient love magic in cuneiform ==
The two types of spells can be connected directly to the gender roles of men and women in Ancient Greece. Women used ''philia'' spells because they were more dependent on their husbands. In marriage, women were powerless, as men were legally permitted to divorce. As a result, many used any means necessary to maintain their marriages. Several women resorted to philia spells as they believed it retained their beauty and kept peace of mind.
Early examples of love magic can be found in the [[ancient Near East]], dating to ca. 2200 BCE. Cuneiform tablets preserving rituals of erotic magic have been uncovered at Tell Inghara and [[Isin]] (present-day Iraq).<ref name="R. Pientka, ‘Aphrodisiaka und Liebeszauber im Alten Orient’, in S. Parpola and R.M. Whiting (eds.), ''Sex and Gender in the Ancient Near East'' (2 vols; Helsinki, 2002), vol. II, pp. 507-522.">R. Pientka, ‘Aphrodisiaka und Liebeszauber im Alten Orient’, in S. Parpola and R.M. Whiting (eds.), ''Sex and Gender in the Ancient Near East'' (2 vols; Helsinki, 2002), vol. II, pp. 507-522.</ref> Similar rituals are attested in Ancient Egypt, for instance, on an [[ostracon]] dated to the twentieth dynasty (twelfth-eleventh centuries BCE).<ref name="J.F. Borghouts, ''Ancient Egyptian Magical Texts'' (Leiden, 1978), p. 1.">[[Joris Borghouts|J.F. Borghouts]], ''Ancient Egyptian Magical Texts'' (Leiden, 1978), p. 1.</ref> Love spells and rituals have been found among the Sumerians, Akkadians, and Babylonians, and formulae used in them can be found in later time periods in the Near East among other peoples.


== Hellenistic love magic ==
''Philia'' magic was used by women to keep their male companion at bay and faithful.<ref name="p. 52ff"/> Basic beliefs about sexual attitudes in Greece were dismissed by the findings in the ''philia'' love spells, potions, and rituals. The spells were not used by women to achieve sexual pleasure, but rather as a form of therapy or medicine. Women commonly used the ''philia'' spells in attempt to preserve their beauty and youth, which in effect would keep their beau faithful. Parallels can be drawn between ''philia'' spells and common medical practices by women today.<ref name="Paul C. Rosenblatt, pg. 482-7">Paul C. Rosenblatt, pg. 482-7</ref> Cosmetic surgery could be seen as serving the same purpose as the ''philia'' spell in terms of beautification.{{Citation needed|date=January 2023}}
Spells of erotic attraction and compulsion are found within the [[Magic in the Greco-Roman world|syncretic magic tradition]] of [[Hellenistic Greece]], which incorporated [[Ancient Egyptian religion|Egyptian]] and [[Magic in the Greco-Roman world#Jewish tradition|Hebraic]] elements as documented in texts such as the [[Greek Magical Papyri]] and archaeologically on [[amulet]]s and other artifacts dating from the 2nd century BC (and sometimes earlier) to the late 3rd century A.D. These magical practices continued to influence private rituals in [[Gaul]] among Celtic peoples, in [[Roman Britain]], and among [[Germanic peoples]].<ref name="p. 52ff">For example, J.H.G. Grattan and Charles Singer, ''Anglo-Saxon Magic and Medicine. Illustrated Specially from the Semi-Pagan Text Lacnunga'' (Oxford University Press, 1952); Felix Grendon, ''Anglo-Saxon Charms'' (Folcroft Library, 1974), ''passim'' (mostly on Christian elements and traditional magic); Anne van Arsdall, ''Medieval Herbal Remedies: The'' Old English Herbarium ''and Anglo-Saxon Medicine'' (Routledge, 2002), [https://books.google.com/books?id=ITxsaqEmVHAC&dq=%22anglo-saxon+magic%22&pg=PA53 p. 52ff.], with cautions about disentangling various strands of the magical tradition; Karen Louise Jolly, "Locating the Charms: Medicine, Liturgy, and Folklore," in ''Popular Religion in Late Saxon England'' (University of North Carolina Press, 1996), [https://books.google.com/books?id=P7LqtqbohIsC&dq=%22glimpse+into+the+intermingling%22+intitle:Late+intitle:Saxon+intitle:England+inauthor:Jolly&pg=PA96 p. 96ff.]</ref>

[[Christopher A. Faraone]], a University of Chicago Classics professor specializing in texts and practices pertaining to magic, distinguishes between the magic of ''[[eros]]'', as practiced by men, and the magic of ''[[philia]]'', practiced by women.<ref name="Paul C. Rosenblatt, pg. 482">Paul C. Rosenblatt, pg. 482.</ref> These two types of spells can be connected directly to the gender roles of men and women in Ancient Greece. Women used ''philia'' spells because they were more dependent on their husbands. In marriage, women were powerless as men were legally permitted to divorce. As a result, many used any means necessary to maintain their marriages which meant more interest in affection producing spells. ''Philia'' magic was used by women to keep their male companion at bay and faithful.<ref name="p. 52ff" /> ''Eros'' spells were mainly practiced by men and a small selection of women, like prostitutes, and were used to imbue lust into the victim. However, Faraone himself also states that ''eros'' magic can be thought of as aggressive magic and ''philia'' as non-aggressive.


While some scholars use Faraone's model, like Catherine Rider though she modifies it slightly, it has been questioned by other scholars, such as Irene Salvo, who points out the exceptions to his classification and finds them to be more elucidating of how love magic in Hellenistic Greece actually worked. She points out there were men who used ''philia'' spells and women who used ''eros'' spells who were not prostitutes or who generally appear to have lived like men.
''Eros'' spells were mainly practiced by men and prostitutes served a completely different function in Ancient Greece. Eros spells were used to imbue lust and passion into women, compelling them to fulfill the man who invoked the spell's sexual desires. With limited freedom, women in Hellenistic Greece pursued emotional escape, aiming at more affection producing spells. Prostitutes were the notable minority of women who used eros spells. Prostitutes in Hellenistic Greece lived lives that were far more similar to men than women. They were financially free, could live where they chose, and were not expected to serve a single man and home. These were the only noted women to use ''Eros'' magic for sexual fulfilment.{{Citation needed|date=January 2023}}


== Love magic in the Renaissance ==
== Love magic in the Renaissance ==
[[Magic (paranormal)|Magic]] was expensive and was believed to cause severe damage to the caster; therefore, it was not taken lightly.<ref name="Rosenblatt">Rosenblatt, Paul C. p. 482-7</ref> Thus, spells were not just cast upon just anyone in the [[Renaissance]], but on those unions that held special importance. Men and women of status and favor were more often the targets of love magic. Economic or [[social class]] restrictions would often inhibit a marriage and love magic was seen as a way to break those barriers, leading to social advancement.<ref name="Matthew W. Dickie, pg. 564">Matthew W. Dickie, pg. 564</ref>
[[File:Der Liebeszauber by Niederrheinischer Meister.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Painting from the lower Rhine, 1470–1480, showing love magic, collection of [[Museum der bildenden Künste]]]]
During the later medieval period (14th to 17th century), [[marriage]] developed into a central institution for public life. This was reflected in the adaptation of love magic: while the immediate desire was the act of intercourse itself, it was most often practiced in an attempt for a permanent union such as marriage. [[Magic (paranormal)|Magic]] was expensive and was believed to cause severe damage to the caster; therefore it was not taken lightly.<ref name="Paul C. Rosenblatt, pg. 482-7"/> Thus, spells were not just cast upon just anyone in the [[Renaissance]], but on those unions that held special importance. Men and women of status and favor were more often the targets of love magic. Economic or [[social class]] restrictions would often inhibit a marriage, and love magic was seen as a way to break those barriers, leading to social advancement.<ref name="Matthew W. Dickie, pg. 564">Matthew W. Dickie, pg. 564</ref>


While the spells were supposed to be kept secret, very rarely were they successful in this. However, if the victim realized that a spell was being cast upon them, believing in magic themselves, they would often submit to the believed enchantment, adding effectiveness to love magic.<ref name="Paul C. Rosenblatt, pg. 482-7"/> This communication of one's desire is essential within the concept of love magic as it enabled a timid person to approach the unapproachable.{{Citation needed|date=January 2023}}
While the spells were supposed to be kept secret, very rarely were they successful in this. However, if the victim realized that a spell was being cast upon them, believing in magic themselves, they would often submit to the believed enchantment, adding effectiveness to love magic.<ref name="Rosenblatt" />


With the dominance of [[Christianity]] and [[Catholicism]] in Europe during the Renaissance, elements of Christianity seeped its way into the magic rituals themselves. Often, clay dolls or written spell scrolls would be hidden in the altar at churches, or holy candles would be lit in the rituals. The Host from a [[Catholic Mass]] would sometimes be taken and used in rituals to gain the desired result. Thus, love magic within the Renaissance period was both Christian and [[Paganism|pagan]].<ref>Guido Ruggiero pg.225</ref>
With the dominance of [[Christianity]] and [[Catholicism]] in Europe during the Renaissance, elements of Christianity seeped its way into the magic rituals themselves. Often, clay dolls or written spell scrolls would be hidden in the altar at churches, or holy candles would be lit in the rituals. The Host from a [[Catholic Mass]] would sometimes be taken and used in rituals to gain the desired result. Thus, love magic within the Renaissance period was both Christian and [[Paganism|pagan]].<ref>Guido Ruggiero pg.225</ref>

== Love magic in literature and art ==
In literature and art, the motif of a genuine love spell is interwoven more often, and is sometimes made the starting point of tragic setbacks and complications. One of the earliest manifestations of the theme in the Western world is the story of [[Heracles]] and [[Deianeira]]. A famous treatment of the subject is in [[Richard Wagner]]'s 1865 opera ''[[Tristan und Isolde|Tristan and Isolde]]'', which in turn goes back to the same epic by [[Gottfried von Strassburg]]. Other examples of the use of love magic motif are [[Donizetti]]'s 1832 opera ''[[The Elixir of Love]]'' (''L'Elisir d'amore'') and [[Manuel de Falla]]'s 1915 ballet ''[[El amor brujo]]'' (The magic of love).{{Citation needed|date=January 2023}}


== Women in love magic ==
== Women in love magic ==
Love magic was seen as drawing "…heavily upon what was perceived as quintessentially feminine: fertility, birth, menstruation (seen as closely related to both fertility and birth), and a woman’s ‘nature’ or ‘shameful parts,’ that is, genitals".<ref>Guido Ruggiero pg.114</ref> This feminine attribute is reflected within the literature such as the ''[[Malleus Maleficarum]]'', and in the trials of the [[Holy Office]] in which most of the cases brought before the council were women accused of bewitching men. This illustrates the common stereotype that men did not do magic.<ref>Matthew W. Dickie pg.564</ref> According to historians Guido Ruggiero and Christopher A. Faraone, love magic often was associated with prostitutes and courtesans. Women in these professions often held psychological power over their partners, with resentment sometimes resulting in drastic measures such as witchcraft accusations.{{Citation needed|date=January 2023}}
In historian Guido Ruggiero's opinion, love magic is seen as drawing "…heavily upon what was perceived as quintessentially feminine: fertility, birth, menstruation (seen as closely related to both fertility and birth), and a woman’s ‘nature’ or ‘shameful parts,’ that is, genitals".<ref>Guido Ruggiero pg.114</ref> This feminine attribute is reflected within the literature such as the ''[[Malleus Maleficarum]]'' and in the trials of the [[Holy Office]] in which most of the cases brought before the council were women accused of bewitching men. This illustrates the common stereotype that men did not perform magic.<ref>Matthew W. Dickie pg.564</ref> According to historians Guido Ruggiero and Christopher A. Faraone, love magic was often associated with prostitutes and courtesans, but this has been questioned by other scholars such as Catherine Rider who, in a study of late medieval Western European pastoral manuals and ''exempla'', especially English, argues this was a development that happened around the time of the [[early modern witch trials]] and may have been influenced by the fact that the women who were most often tried for love magic were women of ill-repute, in illicit relationships, or both. In the early Middle Ages, it was married women who were solely portrayed as practicing love magic on their husbands.


In the [[Early Middle Ages]] there is some evidence that women were considered more likely to be practitioners of love magic, which was considered to be a lesser intellectual type of magic. For instance, in the works of [[Regino of Prüm]], [[Burchard of Worms]] and [[Hincmar]] the practitioners of love magic are usually gendered as female.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Stone|first1=Rachel|last2=West|first2=Charles|title=The Divorce of King Lothar and Queen Theutberga|publisher=Manchester University Press|year=2016}}</ref>
In the [[Early Middle Ages]], there is some evidence that women were considered more likely to be practitioners of love magic. For instance, in the works of [[Regino of Prüm]], [[Burchard of Worms]], and [[Hincmar]] the practitioners of love magic are usually gendered as female.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Stone|first1=Rachel|last2=West|first2=Charles|title=The Divorce of King Lothar and Queen Theutberga|publisher=Manchester University Press|year=2016}}</ref> However, in pastoral manuals and ''exempla'' from this same time period, the practitioners are often not gendered at all or men are primarily singled out.


The view of women within the Renaissance can best be illustrated by the 1487 ''Malleus Maleficarum''. In the opening section of this text, it discusses the sexuality of women in relation to the devil. Heinrich Kramer wrote within his book that, "All witchcraft comes from carnal lust, which in women is insatiable."<ref>Barbara Holdrige, ''Malleus Maleficarum''</ref> The Men of the Renaissance feared the sexual power of the opposing gender. They associated it with the devil, making [[witches]] out to be sexual partners with demons. Kramer makes the case that a witch received her powers by inviting the devil to enter into carnal relations. Through her sexuality she gains her power, and thus her sexuality is seen as evil and something to be feared. In many of the witchcraft accusations brought before the Holy Office in the Roman Inquisition, men accused women of binding their passions and sexuality by the use of their own sexuality.
How modern scholars interpret how medieval and early modern Europeans viewed women, witches, and magic has traditionally been heavily influenced by the 1487 misogynistic anti-witchcraft treatise ''Malleus Maleficarum'' written by Heinrich Kramer. In the opening section of this text, it discusses the sexuality of women in relation to the devil. [[Heinrich Kramer]] wrote within his book that, "All witchcraft comes from carnal lust, which in women is insatiable."<ref>Barbara Holdrige, ''Malleus Maleficarum''</ref> But as Rider and others have noted, this may reflect the opinions of one man in one region and was not widespread in Europe as a whole.


While within literature females dominate the witch world, some scholars believe that reality was much different. Matthew W. Dickie, a prominent magic scholar, argues that men were the main casters of love magic.<ref>Matthew W. Dickie, pg.563</ref> Demographically, they suggest that the largest age group that practiced love magic were younger men targeting young, unobtainable women. There are a variety of explanations for why the literary world contrasted reality in this area, but a common interpretation is that men were trying to subtract themselves from association.<ref>Matthew W. Dickie, pg.564</ref>
Matthew W. Dickie, a prominent magic scholar, argues that men were the main casters of love magic.<ref>Matthew W. Dickie, pg.563</ref> Demographically, they suggest that the largest age group that practiced love magic were younger men targeting young, unobtainable women. There are a variety of explanations for why the literary world contrasted reality in this area, but a common interpretation is that men were trying to subtract themselves from association.<ref>Matthew W. Dickie, pg.564</ref>

== In literature and art ==
[[File:1848 Hummel Liebeszauber anagoria.JPG|thumb|Roman love spell, by [[Johann Erdmann Hummel]], 1848]]
In literature and art, the motif of a genuine love spell used to create or break up a relationship, typically for the benefit of one of the protagonists, is somewhat common, particularly in older literature and art, and sometimes causes tragic setbacks and complications for said protagonists. One of the earliest manifestations of the theme in the Western world is the myth of the hero [[Heracles]]' death by his last wife [[Deianeira]], who was tricked by a centaur into killing him with a poisoned shirt he said would reignite his love for her again should she feel his love ever fade. A famous treatment of the subject is in [[Richard Wagner]]'s 1865 opera ''[[Tristan und Isolde|Tristan and Isolde]]'', which in turn goes back to the same epic by [[Gottfried von Strassburg]]. Other examples of the use of love magic motif are [[Donizetti]]'s 1832 opera ''[[The Elixir of Love]]'' (''L'Elisir d'amore'') and [[Manuel de Falla]]'s 1915 ballet ''[[El amor brujo]]'' (The Magic of Love).{{Citation needed|date=January 2023}} Its use can also be found in modern fantasy fiction like the ''Harry Potter'' series, though since the most prominent use of it is to force a man to love a woman he does not which births the main villain of the series because he cannot understand the concept of love due to his loveless conception, it is not a positive use and love potions have a reputation in the fandom as being the magical equivalent of date rape drugs ("roofies").


== See also ==
== See also ==
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== Notes ==
== Notes ==
{{Reflist}}
{{reflist}}


== References ==
== References ==
*Matthew W. Dickie. "Who Practiced Love-Magic in Classical Antiquity and in the Late Roman World?" ''The Classical Quarterly'', New Series, Vol. 50, No. 2 (2000), pp.&nbsp;563–583. Published by: Cambridge University Press
*Matthew W. Dickie. "Who Practiced Love-Magic in Classical Antiquity and in the Late Roman World?" ''The Classical Quarterly'', New Series, Vol. 50, No. 2 (2000), pp.&nbsp;563–583. Published by: Cambridge University Press
*Olga Lucia Valbuena. "Sorceresses, Love Magic, and the Inquisition of Linguistic Sorcery in Celestina." ''PMLA'', Vol. 109, No. 2 (Mar., 1994), pp.&nbsp;207–224. Published by: Modern Language Association
*Olga Lucia Valbuena. "Sorceresses, Love Magic, and the Inquisition of Linguistic Sorcery in Celestina." ''PMLA'', Vol. 109, No. 2 (Mar., 1994), pp.&nbsp;207–224. Published by: Modern Language Association
* Paul C. Rosenblatt. "Communication in the Practice of Love Magic." ''Social Forces'', Vol. 49, No. 3 (Mar., 1971), pp.&nbsp;482–487 Published by: University of North Carolina Press
* Paul C. Rosenblatt. "Communication in the Practice of Love Magic." ''Social Forces'', Vol. 49, No. 3 (Mar., 1971), pp.&nbsp;482–487 Published by: University of North Carolina Press
* Robert W. Shirley and A. Kimball Romney. "Love Magic and Socialization Anxiety: A Cross-Cultural Study." ''American Anthropologist'', New Series, Vol. 64, No. 5, Part 1 (Oct., 1962), pp.&nbsp;1028–1031. Blackwell Publishing
* Robert W. Shirley and A. Kimball Romney. "Love Magic and Socialization Anxiety: A Cross-Cultural Study." ''American Anthropologist'', New Series, Vol. 64, No. 5, Part 1 (Oct., 1962), pp.&nbsp;1028–1031. Blackwell Publishing
*Saar, Ortal-Paz. "[http://www.societasmagica.org/userfiles/files/Newsletters/docs/SMN_Fall_2010_Issue_24.pdf Some Observations on Jewish Love Magic: The Importance of Cultural Specificity]", ''Societas Magica'' 24 (2010), pp.&nbsp;1–4.
*Saar, Ortal-Paz. "[http://www.societasmagica.org/userfiles/files/Newsletters/docs/SMN_Fall_2010_Issue_24.pdf Some Observations on Jewish Love Magic: The Importance of Cultural Specificity]", ''Societas Magica'' 24 (2010), pp.&nbsp;1–4.
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{{Witchcraft}}
{{Witchcraft}}
{{Fantasy fiction}}
{{Fantasy fiction}}
[[Category:3rd-millennium BC introductions]]

[[Category:Love]]
[[Category:Love]]
[[Category:Magic (supernatural)]]
[[Category:Magic (supernatural)]]
[[Category:Seduction]]
[[Category:Seduction]]
[[Category:Witchcraft]]
[[Category:Witchcraft]]
[[Category:Isin]]

Latest revision as of 21:45, 14 June 2024

Painting from the lower Rhine, 1470–1480, showing love magic, collection of Museum der bildenden Künste

Love magic is a type of magic that has existed or currently exists in many cultures around the world as a part of folk beliefs, both by clergy and laity of nearly every religion. Historically, it is attested on cuneiform tablets from Mesopotamia, in ancient Egyptian texts and later Coptic texts, in the Greco-Roman world, in Syriac texts, in the European Middle Ages and early modern period, and among all Jewish groups who co-existed with these groups.

The exact definition of what constitutes "love magic" can be difficult to establish and will vary from scholar to scholar, but a common theme shared by many is the use of magic to start, preserve, or break up a relationship of some type whether for purely sexual or romantic purposes or both. The tools and methods used in its practice do not significantly differ from the way other forms of magic are practiced and include spoken and written spells and incantations, dolls, talismans, amulets, potions, and rituals.

As most surviving sources concern love between men and women, there is a strong heterosexual bias when discussing these sources, though there are a few examples known to concern love between both two men and two women, such as Greek curse tablets. Love magic motifs appear in literature and art and in the mythologies of many cultures. It is less likely to occur in modern fiction, except in fantasy fiction (like Harry Potter), though even then it is not common and may be portrayed as negative.

Ancient love magic in cuneiform[edit]

Early examples of love magic can be found in the ancient Near East, dating to ca. 2200 BCE. Cuneiform tablets preserving rituals of erotic magic have been uncovered at Tell Inghara and Isin (present-day Iraq).[1] Similar rituals are attested in Ancient Egypt, for instance, on an ostracon dated to the twentieth dynasty (twelfth-eleventh centuries BCE).[2] Love spells and rituals have been found among the Sumerians, Akkadians, and Babylonians, and formulae used in them can be found in later time periods in the Near East among other peoples.

Hellenistic love magic[edit]

Spells of erotic attraction and compulsion are found within the syncretic magic tradition of Hellenistic Greece, which incorporated Egyptian and Hebraic elements as documented in texts such as the Greek Magical Papyri and archaeologically on amulets and other artifacts dating from the 2nd century BC (and sometimes earlier) to the late 3rd century A.D. These magical practices continued to influence private rituals in Gaul among Celtic peoples, in Roman Britain, and among Germanic peoples.[3]

Christopher A. Faraone, a University of Chicago Classics professor specializing in texts and practices pertaining to magic, distinguishes between the magic of eros, as practiced by men, and the magic of philia, practiced by women.[4] These two types of spells can be connected directly to the gender roles of men and women in Ancient Greece. Women used philia spells because they were more dependent on their husbands. In marriage, women were powerless as men were legally permitted to divorce. As a result, many used any means necessary to maintain their marriages which meant more interest in affection producing spells. Philia magic was used by women to keep their male companion at bay and faithful.[3] Eros spells were mainly practiced by men and a small selection of women, like prostitutes, and were used to imbue lust into the victim. However, Faraone himself also states that eros magic can be thought of as aggressive magic and philia as non-aggressive.

While some scholars use Faraone's model, like Catherine Rider though she modifies it slightly, it has been questioned by other scholars, such as Irene Salvo, who points out the exceptions to his classification and finds them to be more elucidating of how love magic in Hellenistic Greece actually worked. She points out there were men who used philia spells and women who used eros spells who were not prostitutes or who generally appear to have lived like men.

Love magic in the Renaissance[edit]

Magic was expensive and was believed to cause severe damage to the caster; therefore, it was not taken lightly.[5] Thus, spells were not just cast upon just anyone in the Renaissance, but on those unions that held special importance. Men and women of status and favor were more often the targets of love magic. Economic or social class restrictions would often inhibit a marriage and love magic was seen as a way to break those barriers, leading to social advancement.[6]

While the spells were supposed to be kept secret, very rarely were they successful in this. However, if the victim realized that a spell was being cast upon them, believing in magic themselves, they would often submit to the believed enchantment, adding effectiveness to love magic.[5]

With the dominance of Christianity and Catholicism in Europe during the Renaissance, elements of Christianity seeped its way into the magic rituals themselves. Often, clay dolls or written spell scrolls would be hidden in the altar at churches, or holy candles would be lit in the rituals. The Host from a Catholic Mass would sometimes be taken and used in rituals to gain the desired result. Thus, love magic within the Renaissance period was both Christian and pagan.[7]

Women in love magic[edit]

In historian Guido Ruggiero's opinion, love magic is seen as drawing "…heavily upon what was perceived as quintessentially feminine: fertility, birth, menstruation (seen as closely related to both fertility and birth), and a woman’s ‘nature’ or ‘shameful parts,’ that is, genitals".[8] This feminine attribute is reflected within the literature such as the Malleus Maleficarum and in the trials of the Holy Office in which most of the cases brought before the council were women accused of bewitching men. This illustrates the common stereotype that men did not perform magic.[9] According to historians Guido Ruggiero and Christopher A. Faraone, love magic was often associated with prostitutes and courtesans, but this has been questioned by other scholars such as Catherine Rider who, in a study of late medieval Western European pastoral manuals and exempla, especially English, argues this was a development that happened around the time of the early modern witch trials and may have been influenced by the fact that the women who were most often tried for love magic were women of ill-repute, in illicit relationships, or both. In the early Middle Ages, it was married women who were solely portrayed as practicing love magic on their husbands.

In the Early Middle Ages, there is some evidence that women were considered more likely to be practitioners of love magic. For instance, in the works of Regino of Prüm, Burchard of Worms, and Hincmar the practitioners of love magic are usually gendered as female.[10] However, in pastoral manuals and exempla from this same time period, the practitioners are often not gendered at all or men are primarily singled out.

How modern scholars interpret how medieval and early modern Europeans viewed women, witches, and magic has traditionally been heavily influenced by the 1487 misogynistic anti-witchcraft treatise Malleus Maleficarum written by Heinrich Kramer. In the opening section of this text, it discusses the sexuality of women in relation to the devil. Heinrich Kramer wrote within his book that, "All witchcraft comes from carnal lust, which in women is insatiable."[11] But as Rider and others have noted, this may reflect the opinions of one man in one region and was not widespread in Europe as a whole.

Matthew W. Dickie, a prominent magic scholar, argues that men were the main casters of love magic.[12] Demographically, they suggest that the largest age group that practiced love magic were younger men targeting young, unobtainable women. There are a variety of explanations for why the literary world contrasted reality in this area, but a common interpretation is that men were trying to subtract themselves from association.[13]

In literature and art[edit]

Roman love spell, by Johann Erdmann Hummel, 1848

In literature and art, the motif of a genuine love spell used to create or break up a relationship, typically for the benefit of one of the protagonists, is somewhat common, particularly in older literature and art, and sometimes causes tragic setbacks and complications for said protagonists. One of the earliest manifestations of the theme in the Western world is the myth of the hero Heracles' death by his last wife Deianeira, who was tricked by a centaur into killing him with a poisoned shirt he said would reignite his love for her again should she feel his love ever fade. A famous treatment of the subject is in Richard Wagner's 1865 opera Tristan and Isolde, which in turn goes back to the same epic by Gottfried von Strassburg. Other examples of the use of love magic motif are Donizetti's 1832 opera The Elixir of Love (L'Elisir d'amore) and Manuel de Falla's 1915 ballet El amor brujo (The Magic of Love).[citation needed] Its use can also be found in modern fantasy fiction like the Harry Potter series, though since the most prominent use of it is to force a man to love a woman he does not which births the main villain of the series because he cannot understand the concept of love due to his loveless conception, it is not a positive use and love potions have a reputation in the fandom as being the magical equivalent of date rape drugs ("roofies").

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ R. Pientka, ‘Aphrodisiaka und Liebeszauber im Alten Orient’, in S. Parpola and R.M. Whiting (eds.), Sex and Gender in the Ancient Near East (2 vols; Helsinki, 2002), vol. II, pp. 507-522.
  2. ^ J.F. Borghouts, Ancient Egyptian Magical Texts (Leiden, 1978), p. 1.
  3. ^ a b For example, J.H.G. Grattan and Charles Singer, Anglo-Saxon Magic and Medicine. Illustrated Specially from the Semi-Pagan Text Lacnunga (Oxford University Press, 1952); Felix Grendon, Anglo-Saxon Charms (Folcroft Library, 1974), passim (mostly on Christian elements and traditional magic); Anne van Arsdall, Medieval Herbal Remedies: The Old English Herbarium and Anglo-Saxon Medicine (Routledge, 2002), p. 52ff., with cautions about disentangling various strands of the magical tradition; Karen Louise Jolly, "Locating the Charms: Medicine, Liturgy, and Folklore," in Popular Religion in Late Saxon England (University of North Carolina Press, 1996), p. 96ff.
  4. ^ Paul C. Rosenblatt, pg. 482.
  5. ^ a b Rosenblatt, Paul C. p. 482-7
  6. ^ Matthew W. Dickie, pg. 564
  7. ^ Guido Ruggiero pg.225
  8. ^ Guido Ruggiero pg.114
  9. ^ Matthew W. Dickie pg.564
  10. ^ Stone, Rachel; West, Charles (2016). The Divorce of King Lothar and Queen Theutberga. Manchester University Press.
  11. ^ Barbara Holdrige, Malleus Maleficarum
  12. ^ Matthew W. Dickie, pg.563
  13. ^ Matthew W. Dickie, pg.564

References[edit]

  • Matthew W. Dickie. "Who Practiced Love-Magic in Classical Antiquity and in the Late Roman World?" The Classical Quarterly, New Series, Vol. 50, No. 2 (2000), pp. 563–583. Published by: Cambridge University Press
  • Olga Lucia Valbuena. "Sorceresses, Love Magic, and the Inquisition of Linguistic Sorcery in Celestina." PMLA, Vol. 109, No. 2 (Mar., 1994), pp. 207–224. Published by: Modern Language Association
  • Paul C. Rosenblatt. "Communication in the Practice of Love Magic." Social Forces, Vol. 49, No. 3 (Mar., 1971), pp. 482–487 Published by: University of North Carolina Press
  • Robert W. Shirley and A. Kimball Romney. "Love Magic and Socialization Anxiety: A Cross-Cultural Study." American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 64, No. 5, Part 1 (Oct., 1962), pp. 1028–1031. Blackwell Publishing
  • Saar, Ortal-Paz. "Some Observations on Jewish Love Magic: The Importance of Cultural Specificity", Societas Magica 24 (2010), pp. 1–4.
  • Saar, Ortal-Paz. Jewish Love Magic: From Late Antiquity to the Middle Ages. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2017.
  • Ruggiero, Guido. Binding Passions. Oxford Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, 1993
  • Sack, Robert David. "Magic and Space" Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Vol. 66, No. 2 (Jun., 1976), pp. 309–322 Published by: Taylor & Francis, Ltd. on behalf of the Association of American Geographers
  • Barbara Holdrige, 1430-1505 Malleus Maleficarum [sound recording] / by Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger ; translated by Montague Summers. Abridged by Barbara Holdridge Publisher Caedmon, 1974