As shown in Shakespeare's plays Henry VI Part I and Henry VI Part II the traditional punishment for witches was to be burned at the stake. But new laws were made during the sixteenth century. The Witchcraft Act of 1562 provided that claims of witchcraft were to be tried as felonies, and punished by imprisonment except in cases where the witchcraft was proven to have caused harm, in which case the punishment was death by hanging. King James's Witchcraft Act of 1604 allowed the death penalty for all cases of witchcraft. Again, the death penalty was by hanging.
As shown in Shakespeare's plays Henry VI Part I and Henry VI Part II the traditional punishment for witches was to be burned at the stake. But new laws were made during the sixteenth century. The Witchcraft Act of 1562 provided that claims of witchcraft were to be tried as felonies, and punished by imprisonment except in cases where the witchcraft was proven to have caused harm, in which case the punishment was death by hanging. King James's Witchcraft Act of 1604 allowed the death penalty for all cases of witchcraft. Again, the death penalty was by hanging.
They thought witches were real in his time, so they were a natural predictor for telling the future in his plays.
ShakeSpeare did not relate to witches, but many people belived he wrote storys on witches because him or someone in his family was a witch.
Audiences during Shakespeare's time considered witches and curses to be real and much scarier than todays audiences would.
We do not have any records of what Elizabethan witches (assuming there really was such a thing) might have thought about anything.
Oh, yes and they were burned, drowned, and killed all the time in his time. Anyone who was a little different, a red head, or disabled were considered witches.
There were eight kings of Scotland who were allegedly decended from Fleance, the last being James VI who happened to be king of England when Shakespeare was writing the play.
Around that era there were many who believed in the existence of witches and ghosts etc
The Shakespeare Code
Strange or unnatural events
Strange and unnatural events
During Shakespeare's time, belief in witches was influenced by societal fears, religious teachings, and superstitions. People believed that witches had supernatural powers to harm others and were in league with the devil. The fear of witchcraft was heightened by events like the witch trials in England and Scotland.
The Witches.