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.
2, under suspicion of being familiars because they were owned by accused witches.
19 people were executed
nine million and more !
Four women in California have been executed, and they have all been sent to the California Gas Chamber.
People back during the Salem Witch Trials became so paranoid that they thought anyone acting strangely were witches.
Many of the people executed at Salem as witches did have childred. Some were also grandparents and great-grandparents. In general, those accused as witches were just normal, middle-aged people and normal middle-aged people back then had children and possibly grandchildren.
In Salem, Massachusetts; innocent people were accused of being witches and warlocks, many were tried and executed. Joseph McCarthy accused innocent people of being communists. Many lost their jobs, were sent to prison, and died in poverty or had their lives destroyed and never fully recovered.
None, for two reasons. First, none of the executed were actually witches by any definition. Second, in Puritan New England, witchcraft was a capital crime, thus the punishment for witchcraft was hanging.
I cannot say how many actual witches were condemned, nor how many of the nine million people executed died in Europe, although I imagine most of them were. As far as names, I don't think you want me to list them here. Needless to say, it was enough to be considered genocide.
Many people were but one of the most famous fables was that David Crockett was executed after being overwhelmed.
As far as scientist know, 0. The Salem Witch Trials, however, was a time when people were accused of being witches and were killed.
In 1600, the exact number of witches executed varies by region, as witch hunts were prevalent in different parts of Europe. However, it is estimated that hundreds of people accused of witchcraft were executed during that time. The peak of witch hunts occurred in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, with notable cases in countries like England, Scotland, and Germany. Specific figures for 1600 alone are difficult to determine due to inconsistent record-keeping.