Thousands.
Thousands.
The Salem Witch Trials are a very important part of US history. People were accused of witchcraft for many reasons, living alone, doing things that seemed odd to the town, and for sport. Sometimes people called others witches because they had a problem with them.
she saved herself by confessing early on (after being beaten by her master) and accused other people of being witches, and telling people that there were many more in salam.
Abigail Williams was a real person but also a main character in the play, The Crucible by Arthur Miller. She accused three women of witchcraft.
20.
It is estimated that around 200 people were accused of witchcraft during the Salem witch trials, with 20 individuals being executed. This means that about 90% of those accused were innocent of the crimes they were charged with.
The Salem witchcraft trials were held in Salem, Massachusetts in 1692. 140 were accused, 20 were killed.
There really wasn't a "movement" but a misunderstanding of people and use of superstition. Many people who were accused as witches were often special needs people, had psychological problems, were childless and alone, and just different. Red heads were often accused of witchcraft and sometimes people who wanted to eliminate a person accused them of witchcraft. This was a time when superstition was the science and real science was outlawed by the Church. When people don't understand events or people they turn to superstition as the answer and it is any easy way to explain things including witches.
The Pendle witches were a group of twelve people from the area around Pendle Hill in Lancashire, England, who were accused of witchcraft in 1612. Of these, ten were tried at Lancaster Assizes, and two were found not guilty. The trials have become one of the most famous witchcraft cases in English history. Ultimately, ten of the accused were convicted, and they were hanged.
Tituba, an enslaved woman of African descent, was accused of witchcraft in February 1692 during the Salem witch trials in colonial Massachusetts. Her accusations were part of a larger wave of hysteria that swept through Salem Village, where numerous individuals were accused of practicing witchcraft. Tituba's confession and the sensational details she provided fueled the panic, leading to the trials and executions of many others.
Many were accused of witchcraft due to their iniquitous behavior and tension in the villages. These accusations led to the Salem witch trials and executions of twenty people between February 1692 and May 1693.
142 people were legally accused of witchcraft during the Salem Hysteria.This count does not include people who were rumored by neighbors or relatives of being involved with witchcraft. Only a handful of these people were executed, 16 I think, a few with the money or influence to do so escaped town, charges were dropped against some and the remainder served time in prison but were released.