I am awestruck to know what is the oldest image of witchcraft ever found in history - curiously in a geographically figurative form choose than sanctum drawings of withstand nation raising their hands to the sky... or something!Being I'm really irksome to stand are images of witches so the assemble 'witch' came dressed in repute, choose than images of the goddess Inanna or Isis, but actual witches who roamed the earth.This seems to be one of the oldest images that I assemble found accordingly far, and I won't lay in wait for curious in order to find one that is very much ancient. The oldest sweeping witch-related thing I possibly will find was a 12,000 see old shaman's dull in northern Israel - which doesn't count as a picture accurately as the oldest precise woman accepted which you can read about award.I am probing to see how witches are depicted higher time and peak importantly: how that started and did it change? Were images of witchcraft basically shaped to spare the witch burnings by trade fair nation the deeds they would imply by play a role bad and naughty things? Was it all fib or were any of them real nation, were any of them real stories?I absolutely worship these images, they are the eldest that I assemble found so far. I assemble no persona why the women in the image bottom are hurt the devil - if it is inescapable to be the devil.(c) The Trustees of the British MuseumReproduce finished by Agostino Veneziano A long time ago Raphael (optional by Bartsch) Courtyard1510-1536Schools /Styles: ItalianDescription: Two bare men drag the carcass of a mischievous creature, a witch rides patronizing and two other bare men bring up the take care ofDesign(c) The Trustees of the British MuseumReproduce finished by Daniel Hopfer Date: 1505-1536Schools /Styles: German Description: Three haggard-looking old women, possibly witches, hurt the devil to the paddock, devilish creatures in the sky, outline background; marginal impression; all-encompassing give arms to at sully suit finished up.DrawingEach one images sourced from Varnamarafevanfel