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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX<br />

WITCHCRAFT LITERATURE<br />

IN MESOPOTAMIA<br />

<br />

Tzvi Abusch<br />

Let us begin with simple definitions of magic and witchcraft in Mesopotamia. We<br />

classify as magical those rites that address the needs, crises, and desires of the<br />

individual. In contrast to some later western societies, magic in Mesopotamia was<br />

regarded as legitimate and as part of the established religion. <strong>The</strong>refore, in a Mesopotamian<br />

context, witchcraft refers not to magical behavior as such, but to inimical<br />

behavior, that is, to the practice of magic for anti-social and destructive purposes<br />

(though, as we shall note later, not all behavior so labeled was, in fact, motivated by<br />

evil intentions).<br />

Over the course of some 2,500 years (c.2600–100 BCE), numerous cuneiform texts<br />

written in both the Sumerian and Akkadian languages refer to personal crisis and<br />

individual suffering (e.g., letters, curses, and literary compositions that treat the problem<br />

of theodicy); but, by and large, the most important sources detailing ways to cope<br />

with illness, danger, and personal difficulties are the various types of texts that describe<br />

symptoms, provide etiological or descriptive diagnoses, and prescribe ways to deal<br />

with evil and suffering. <strong>The</strong>se treatments include medical therapies, ritual prescriptions,<br />

and oral rites (prayers and incantations). Among the rituals, we find several long and<br />

complex ceremonies.<br />

<strong>The</strong> principal agencies in the religio-magical world view were gods, demons, personal<br />

gods, ghosts, witches, evil omens, curses, and sins. Frequently Mesopotamian<br />

traditional texts treated personal distress or illness as the result of the action or<br />

inaction of supernatural powers. In this view, the universe was understood to be<br />

hierarchically structured and to be centered on divine powers. This approach seems,<br />

however, to have emerged from, or to have drawn upon, an earlier approach that<br />

viewed the world holistically.<br />

<strong>The</strong> changing explanations of suffering and the changing configurations of causal<br />

agents and chains of causation probably reflect different social situations and can be<br />

explained in historical terms. <strong>The</strong> earlier mechanistic magical universe reflected the<br />

social context of traditional society: the village and pre-urban settlement. A traditional<br />

world view probably continued to remain operative for the mass of rural and urban<br />

dwellers. But alongside this world view and based upon it, a new world view that<br />

reflected the values and interests of the emerging urban elite arose; in this new view,<br />

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