20-33. They hung Nineteen people, crushed one under heavy stones and as many as thirteen people may have died in prison.
19 were hanged and one was pressed to death. 20 in total.
Twenty
Hanging
Reverend Hale was the Puritan pastor during the Salem Witch Trials. He told the witches to confess falsely in order to save their lives.
No witches were ever burned at Salem. In Puritan society, witchcraft was a felony and punishable by hanging. During the Salem Witch Trials, 19 people suffered that fate.
People back during the Salem Witch Trials became so paranoid that they thought anyone acting strangely were witches.
The Salem witch trials. Increase Mather was too smart and political knowlegdable to believe that there were witches.
Nineteen.
There were no actual, practicing witches invovled, accused or otherwise existing in Salem during the witch trials.
The book "Time of the Witches" takes place in early colonial America, particularly in the town of Salem, Massachusetts, during the Salem Witch Trials in the late 17th century.
As far as scientist know, 0. The Salem Witch Trials, however, was a time when people were accused of being witches and were killed.
Hanging
There were no actual witches in Salem during the trials. Witchcraft was seem as wrong because they thought it was the work of the devil. They thought witches killed crops, sunk ships and murdered people. That's what "witch" meant to the people in Salem. Now, it refers to Wiccans, pagans and the like. Hope that helps. Your question was very hard to understand.
Nineteen, fourteen women and five men.
Samuel Paris worked as a minister in Salem, Massachusetts during the Salem witch trials. His daughter and niece were both amongst the girls who were accused of being witches.
During the Salem Witch Trials in Salem Massachusetts in 1692, 19 were hanged, 1 was pressed to death and as many as 13 died in prison.
The convicted were executed by hanging.
The last of the Salem Witch trials ended in may 1693
Bridget Bishop