Around 25. Only 19 were executed.
19
19. 14 women, 5 men.
If they were convicted, their property was confiscated.
The convicted were executed by hanging.
2 in 1692 all 26 who actually went to trial (lots more were accused) were convicted.
Assuming you are referring to the Salem witch trials of 1692... No. Nineteen of the convicted, 14 women and 5 men, were executed by hanging.
No. She was convicted but given a stay of execution because she was pregnant. Before that ran out, the Trials ended.
They really aren't. The Salem Witch Trials tried regular people accused of witchcraft and convicted in Puritan society. The Rosenburg Trials tried two people who were trying to spy on the US during a time of diplomatic hostilities.
Nineteen people were hanged during the Salem witch trials.
None. Burning was not the punishment for witchcraft in colonial New England. Anyone convicted of witchcraft was hanged.
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 American town famous for the Witch Trials (called the Salem Witch Trials) is Salem, Massachusetts.