Sathanas/Satan - Wrath

The most well-known prince of hell, Satan, the king of fury, is unquestionably the sixth.


Since this is Peter Binsfeld's classification, we can conclude that when he uses the term "Satan," he is referring to the Christian interpretation of the demon in the early modern era, which began immediately after the Middle Ages and continued through the 16th century.


In several European nations, the fear of witches started to spiral out of hand starting around 1480. The two most infamous cases were France and Germany, the country of Binsfeld's birth.


We observe Satan's relationship with warlocks and witches because of Heinrich Kramer and Jacob Sprenger's Malleus Maleficarum, which was published in 1487 and explained that all magic was founded in Satan's creation.


With the fear of witchcraft on the rise, Satan naturally would become a demon that people feared, to the point where the church turned its attention away from other religions and instead focused on Satan. In the Middle Ages, Satan was always portrayed as pitiful and repulsive, with no real power, but now that witchcraft was becoming more and more of a threat. It was believed that Christians would stray if they merely believed in him.

Satan - Wrath - Pinterest
Satan - Wrath - Pinterest
mythologyexplained.com
mythologyexplained.com

Top 7 Most Powerful Princes of Hell in Western Religion

  1. top 1 Lucifer - Pride
  2. top 2 Mammon - Greed
  3. top 3 Leviathan - Envy
  4. top 4 Asmodeus - Lust
  5. top 5 Beelzebub - Gluttony
  6. top 6 Sathanas/Satan - Wrath
  7. top 7 Belphegor - Sloth

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