The Night Battles is divided into four chapters, preceded by a preface written by Ginzburg, in which he discusses the various scholarly approaches that have been taken to studying Early Modern witchcraft, including the rationalist interpretation that emerged in the 18th century and the
Witch-cult hypothesis presented by
Margaret Murray. He proceeds to offer an introduction to the benandanti, and then thanks those who have helped him in producing his study.
Part I: The Night Battles The first part of
The Night Battles deals primarily with the accounts of two
benandanti who were interrogated and sentenced for heresy by the Roman Inquisition between 1575 and 1582. These two figures,
Paulo Gaspurotto of the village of Iassaco and Battista Moduco of the town of
Cividale, first came under investigation from the priest Don Bartolomeo Sgabarizza in 1575. Although Sgabarizza later abandoned his investigations, in 1580 the case was re-opened by the Inquisitor Fra Felice da Montefalco, who interrogated both Gaspurotto and Moduco until they admitted that they had been deceived by the Devil into going on their nocturnal spirit journeys. In 1581 they were sentenced to six months imprisonment for heresy, a punishment that was later remitted. Ginzburg then looks at Gaspurotto and Moduco's claims in greater detail, noting that the
benandanti constituted "a true and proper sect" who were united by having been born with a
caul. He proceeds to examine the trances that the
benandanti went into in order to go on their nocturnal spirit journeys, debating whether these visions could have been induced by the use of special psychoactive ointments or by
epilepsy, ultimately arguing that neither offer a plausible explanation in light of the historical evidence at hand. Ginzburg looks at the agricultural elements to the benandanti's battles with their satanic opponents, arguing that their clashes represent an "agricultural rite" that symbolized the forces of famine fighting the forces of plenty. He suspected that this was a survival from an "older fertility rite" that had originated in pre-Christian Europe but which had subsequently been Christianized. He then goes on to examine the Early Modern accounts of aspects of popular belief across Europe that were similar to those of the benandanti. In particular he highlights the alleged cult of the goddess
Diana that was recorded in late 15th century
Modena and the case of the
Livonian werewolf which occurred in 1692. Ginzburg ultimately argued that these scattered visionary traditions represented surviving elements of a pan-central European agrarian cult that had predated Christianization.
Part II: The Processions of the Dead In the second part of
The Night Battles, Ginzburg turns his attention toward those Early Modern Alpine traditions dealing with nocturnal processions of the dead. He initially discusses the
interrogation of Anna la Rossa, a self-confessed
spirit medium who was brought before the Roman Inquisition in Friuli in 1582, before detailing two similar cases that took place later that year, that of Donna Aquilina and Caterina la Guercia. The latter of these women claimed that her deceased husband had been a
benandante, and that he had gone on a "procession with the dead", but none of them described themselves as being
benandante. Ginzburg then looks at the
Canon Episcopi, a 9th-century document that denounced those women who believed that they went on nocturnal processions with the goddess Diana; the
Canon's author had claimed that they were deceived by the Devil, but Ginzburg argues that it reflects a genuine folk belief of the period. He connects this account with the many other European myths surrounding the
Wild Hunt or Furious Horde, noting that in those in central Europe, the name of Diana was supplanted by that of
Holda or
Perchta. Ginzburg then highlights the 11th-century account produced by French Bishop
William of Auvergne, in which he had described a folk belief surrounding a female divinity named Abundia or Satia, who in William's opinion was a disguised devil. According to William's account, this creature travelled through houses and cellars at night, accompanied by her followers, where they would eat or drink whatever they found; Ginzburg noted parallels with the
benandanti belief that witches would drink all of the water in a house. Ginzburg highlights more evidence of the Wild Hunt folk motif in the Late Medieval accounts of the Dominican friar
Johannes Nider. Nader related that certain women believed that they were transported to the conventicles of the goddess
Herodias on the
Ember Days, something which the monk attributed to the trickery of the Devil. Proceeding with his argument, Ginzburg describes an account by the chaplain Matthias von Kemnat, who recorded the persecution of a sect at
Heidelberg circa 1475. According to Kemnat, this sect contained women who believed that they "travelled" during the Ember Days and cast non-fatal spells on men. Ginzburg then turns his attention to a work of the early 16th century,
Die Emeis, written by the Swiss preacher
Johann Geiler von Kaisersberg. In this account, Geiler refers to those people who went on nocturnal visits to see Fraw Fenus (Venus), including those women who fell into a swoon on the Ember Days, and who described a visit to Heaven after they had awoken. In further search of references to processions of the dead in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Ginzburg then highlights a 1489 trial of the weaver Giuliano Verdana held in
Mantua and the 1525 trial of a woman named Wyprat Musin in
Bürserberg, in both of which the defendant claimed to have seen a procession of dead spirits led by a female figure. This is then followed by a discussion of the case of German herdsman Chonrad Stoecklin, who recounted visionary experiences in 1587 before being condemned as a witch. Following on from this, Ginzburg discussed the existence of
clerici vagantes who were recorded as travelling around the
Swabian countryside in 1544, performing folk magic and claiming that they could conjure the Furious Horde. Ginzburg then discusses the case of Diel Breull, a German sorcerer who was tried in
Hesse in 1630; Breull had claimed that on a visionary journey he encountered Fraw Holt, who revealed that he was a member of her nocturnal band. Ginzburg then makes comparisons between the
benandanti and the
Perchtenlaufen, an Alpine ceremony in which two masked groups of peasants battled one another with sticks, one dressed to appear ugly and the other to appear beautiful. Debating as to whether the traditions surrounding the processions of the dead originated in Germanic or Slavic Europe, Ginzburg then goes on to discuss the significance of the
caul in
benandanti belief.
Part III: The Benandanti between Inquisitors and Witches In Part III, Ginzburg comments on how uninterested the Inquisition were in the
benandanti between 1575 and 1619, noting that "The benandanti were ignored as long as possible. Their 'fantasies' remained enclosed within a world of material and emotional needs which inquisitors neither understood, nor even tried to understand." He proceeds to discuss the few isolated incidents in which they did encounter and interact with the
benandante during this period, opening with a discussion of the denunciation and arrest of self-professed
benandanti Toffolo di Buri, a herdsman from the village of Pieris, that took place in 1583. This is followed by an exploration of the 1587 investigation into a midwife named Caterina Domenatta, who was accused of sorcery, and who admitted that both her father and dead husband had been
benandante. From there, Ginzburg outlines a number of depositions and records of
benandanti that were produced from 1600 to 1629, arguing that towards the latter end of this period,
benandanti were becoming more open in their denunciations of witches and that inquisitors were increasingly viewing them as a public nuisance rather than as witches themselves.
Part IV: The Benandanti at the Sabbat ==Arguments==