Since at least the 19th century, "cambion" has taken on a further definition: the child of an incubus
or a succubus with a human parent. In 1874,
Victor Hugo's
Toilers of the Sea defined a cambion as the son of a woman and the devil. It also appeared as a hybrid of human and demon in''
Dungeons & Dragons'
1983 Monster Manual II.'' The concept of offspring born to humans and demons was a subject of debate in the Middle Ages, but did not have a widely accepted name. The influential
Malleus Maleficarum, which has been described as the major compendium of literature in demonology of the fifteenth century, states that demons, including the incubus and the succubus, are incapable of reproduction: Because of this inability to create or nurture life, the method of the creation of a cambion is necessarily protracted. A succubus will have sexual relations with a human male and so
acquire a sample of his
sperm. This she will then pass on to an incubus, who then corrupts and strengthens the seed. The incubus will, in his turn, transfer this sperm to a human female and thus impregnate her. The text goes on to discuss at great length the arguments for and against this process being possible, citing a number of Biblical quotations and noted scholars in support of its arguments, and finally concludes that this is indeed the method used by such demons. The
Malleus Maleficarum refers to the children of incubi as "campsores" or "Wechselkind" (a German term for
changelings). ==In popular culture==