List of Illustrations
Introduction by Gábor Klaniczay and Éva Pócs
Part I
Learned Demonology, Images of the Devil
Benedek Láng, Demons in Krakow, and Image Magic in a Magical Handbook
Anna Kuznetsova, "A Wall of Bronze" or Demons versus Saints: Whose Victory?
Erzsébet Tatai, An Iconographical Approach to Representations of the Devil in Medieval Hungary
György E. Szonyi, Talking With Demons. Early Modern Theories and Practice
Éva Szacsvay, Protestant Devil Figures in Hungary
Ulrika Wolf-Knuts, The Devil and Birthgiving
Part II
Exchanges between Elite and Popular Concepts
Karen P. Smith, Serpent-damsels and Dragon-slayers: Overlapping Divinities in a Medieval Tradition
Wanda Wyporska, Jewish, Noble, German, or Peasant? - The Devil in Early Modern Poland
Jonas Liliequist, Sexual Encounters with Spirits and Demons in Early Modern Sweden: Popular and Learned Concepts in Conflict and Interaction
Soili-Maria Eklund, Church Demonology and Popular Beliefs in Early Modern Sweden
Part III
Evil Magic and Demons in East European and Asian Folklore
Ilana Rosen, Saintly and Sympathetic Magic in the Lore of the Jews of Carpatho-Russia Between the Two World Wars
Monika Kropej, Magic as Reflected in Slovenian Folk Tradition and Popular Healing Today
L’upcho S. Risteski, Categories of the “Evil Dead" in Macedonian Folk Religion
Anna Plotnikova, Balkan Demons’ Protecting Places
Vesna Petreska, Demons of Fate in Macedonian Folk Beliefs
Zmago Šmitek, Gog and Magog in the Slovenian Folk Tradition
Ágnes Birtalan, Systematization of the Concept of Demonic and Evil in Mongolian Folk Religion