Witches were burned at the stake to clense the towns and cities.
Women who had black cats and had bad things happen around their house were trialed and if found guilty burned at the stake. If they were found innocent they had probably been killed by the trial anyway
Christians burned Witches because of the Catholic Church. One of the original Gods to the Wiccan belief had horns and thus created the spark of the Devil. The Original Satan was in fact an angel that challenged God's power and go banished from Heaven. The Catholic Church then crossed the two religions to make it be that Wiccans were Satan worshipers. But this is a contradiction because the darker side of Christian is Satanism, and Wiccanism has no affiliation of the latter.
They believed they were evil and brought bad luck
Witches were thought to be the devils helper.
People back during the Salem Witch Trials became so paranoid that they thought anyone acting strangely were witches.
I wouldn't say that they were discovered so much as falsely accused. Witches are mythical (at least in the sense that you mean).most were discovered by towns people wrongfully accusing people because they did not like them but some tryed to prove a point that witches were not devil worshiper but they just ended up being killed
yes. people accused of being witches were burned at stake, sometimes, people thought that witches could take the form of cats, so if you saw a cat more then three times, and it was the same, the cat would be found and burned at stake.
People who had practices that might be interpreted as witchcraft, or who might have been accused, were much more likely to be treated well during the Middle Ages than they were later. A superstitious fear of witches has existed in many societies, and medieval Europe was no exception. There were cases of witches being killed by various groups of people, at times. And so it was necessary for governments to step in. The laws of the Franks and the Lombards, at the time of Charlemagne, explicitly made belief in witchcraft a superstition, and made killing a person for practicing witchcraft murder, unless it could be proven that the witch had actually killed someone. The Middle Ages lasted a thousand years, and there were many countries, with many different legal codes, in it. There were countries where witchcraft was considered a crime. But this was not general over all of Europe, or even over all of Western Europe. Inquisitions, or investigations, into witchcraft began in various parts of Europe at just about the same time as the Italian Renaissance. The early inquisitions were not aimed at large parts of populations, and were not witch hunts, as they only took place where there were accusations against individuals. No one was actively trying to look through everyone in town to find out who were witches, and who were not. The inquisitions in which entire populations were put to the test did not happen until the Middle Ages were over. The first set of instructions on how to identify witches began to circulate in 1487, a year after the end date most historians use for the Middle Ages. Witch hunts, with large numbers of people identified as witches and punished for that practice, came after that. I have seen estimates of that there were about 1000 people executed as witches during the Middle Ages, though such estimates are really professional guesses. The best estimates for the number of people executed as witches during the time of 1450 to 1750 seem to run from about 35000. So the people of medieval Europe, who are commonly called superstitious, executed an average of one person per year in the entire continent. But the people of the European Renaissance and the years following, who are thought of as enlightened, executed an average of about 1100 to 1200.
most of the people were hung. There was one man however crushed to death with stones because he refused to confess to something he didnt do so his last words were more weight which crushed his lungs and killed him. 0fede1fa-922b-458f-a1b8-241ad95ce60f 1.03.01
People back during the Salem Witch Trials became so paranoid that they thought anyone acting strangely were witches.
The people back then were afraid of what they didn't know, as we are now. So when someone said someone else was a witch, it brought fear to everyone, and they all wanted to get rid of the thing that brougt them fear. And it was men and children to, not just women.
I wouldn't say that they were discovered so much as falsely accused. Witches are mythical (at least in the sense that you mean).most were discovered by towns people wrongfully accusing people because they did not like them but some tryed to prove a point that witches were not devil worshiper but they just ended up being killed
People were scared of what witches could or would do with their power. They considered all witches evil, which was not, in fact, the case. Indeed, there were evil witches, but there were also good witches.
About 100 people sign a petition so that they may testify for the women who were accused of being witches. These same people were later arrested for being witches.
In Shakespeare's time, witches were commonly believed to be executed by hanging or burning at the stake. The belief was that they were in league with the Devil and practicing dark magic, so they were seen as a threat to society and punished with death.
"Witches" did not really exist, but people were frightened by the thought of them. They would burn or hang witches. Citezens that nobody liked were usually accused of being witches in order do get rid of them. Others were accused because they did not fit in or were very strange, so they were suspects of practicing witchcraft.
Matthew Hopkins didn't kill any witches. His evidence caused them to be found guilty in court and sentenced to hang by a judge and jury. The exact number is unknown but estimated to be somewhere around 300 accused, and 150 or so actually found guilty, and slightly less than that number executed due to judicial reprieves.
There are many people whom identify as a Witch today. Some of these people are also known as Wiccans however not all Witches are Wiccans.
yes. people accused of being witches were burned at stake, sometimes, people thought that witches could take the form of cats, so if you saw a cat more then three times, and it was the same, the cat would be found and burned at stake.
Many people are frightened or grossed out by toads, so adding them to a holiday all about being spooked can add to the fun. Also, toad parts are traditionally used in witches' brews.
well, witches were believed to be bad so people wanted to kill them!! the end bye!!