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None. Burning was not the punishment for witchcraft in colonial New England. Anyone convicted of witchcraft was hanged.

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What year did the Salem witch burnings take place?

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.


Who was involved in the Salem witch trials?

Whole bunch of people and Villingers. the afflicted and the acused were the main people.


Were there heresy trials in the Consistory Courts in England in the mid 19th century?

In the mid-19th century, there were no heresy trials in the Consistory Courts in England as such trials had largely diminished by that time. The Church of England, which had previously dealt with heresy through ecclesiastical courts, shifted towards a more tolerant approach. The last significant heresy trial in England occurred in the early 19th century, and by the mid-1800s, the focus of the Consistory Courts had moved away from heresy to matters of church governance and discipline.


Did witchcraft scare Quakers?

No, the Quakers were accused of Witchcraft in New England long before the Salem Witch Trials. They left New England for Pennsylvania.


Did they burn the witches of the Salem witch trials?

No, they did not. Witches were only burned in England, not in North America. During the Salem witch trials nineteen people were executed by hanging, one died in the interrogation. ^^^^This makes it sound like witches were burned a lot in England, when in fact this form of excution was extremely rare for witches and more reserved for Protestants, who where burned by Catholics. The more favored way of dealing with witches in England was beheading, drowning, and breaking on the wheel. Witches were rarely burned at the stake, buried alive, boiled alive, impaled, sawed in two, flayed, drawn and quartered, or disemboweled, as other contemporary criminals were. Other punishments inflicted on convicted witches included mutilating (cutting off of a hand or ear for example), branding, whipping, dunking, locking in the the stocks, jailing, fining, banishing, or selling into slavery. To improve on this answer. The people that were executed were not witches at all. They were Puritans who had a case of ergot poisoning. Ergot is a fungus that attacks rye. Rye being one of the main crops of these people. The rye was used to make bread a staple of the Puritan diet of that time. Ergot fungus is the very same fungus that the modern drug LSD comes from. People exposed to high levels of ergot fungus have the same symptoms as a person on LSD... dementia, hallucinations, etc. Of course during those times, no one knew or had the means to know what was causing people within their community to act the way they were... the most "logical" answer was witchcraft. To improve all these answers let me first correct them... ergot poising had nothing to do with this the people who were executed were not witches some had only agreed to admit that so that they would be let free. 19 people were hanged 18 were Innocent 1 man was killed during interrogation they were told to pile rocks on top of him he died 2 or 3 days later. one woman named Lisa said with out being interrogated that she practiced witch craft. No. Burning was the method of execution for witches on the Continent. In America and the England, witches were hanged. This latest "answer" is not an improvement, as it is based on opinion and not proven historical fact. Correcting already correct answers.. It is a proven fact that ergot poisoning had everything to do with what people were experiencing in Salem, I actually live very close to Salem, have been there many times, and have heard the history countless times. The ergot was linked to the hallucinations and strange visions people were experiencing. Since they (at the time) had no clue about ergot and its effects on the neurological passages, they thought it was witchcraft and pointed blame at the one person that was "not like them".. but it later spread to blaming people throughout the colony. Ergot poisoning started it all, fear and lack of knowledge finished it with deaths of innocent people.

Related Questions

Are there any modern witch craft trials in the world?

No. "Witches" now describes pagans and wiccans, people who are simply following a religion.


In which new England colony were the Salem witch trials 1692?

Massachusetts.


Where can you find clinical research trials?

One can find clinical research trials either in a local clinic. Alternatively, one can go online to find such trials in the following websites: ClinicalTrials or ClinicalResearchTrials.


What year did the Salem witch burnings take place?

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.


What is an 1600 witch?

A dead witch. In 1692, there were the Salem Witch Trials, and I must say that an awful lot of women were burned, both innocent and guilty, because they were accused of witchcraft simply because they could heal people that (male) doctors couldn't. People have always been afraid of things they know nothing of, and that's why witches in the 1600s were feared above most else. EDIT: First, in Protestant England and America, witches were hanged. Second, only 14 women died in the Salem Trials. Third, Every victim of the Salem panic was innocent.


How many people started the witch trials?

Depending on who you ask, either 1, 2, or 3 people begin the trials.


How many people were hang during the Salem Witch Trials episode?

Nineteen people were hanged during the Salem witch trials.


What excuse did the defendants at the Nuremberg trials give for their action during the war?

"We were following orders"


How do you complete the freminik trials on runescape?

Refer to the guides on the following site: www.runehq.com www.zybez.com


What did people think of witches in the 1600's?

People thought witches were horrible deadly people! People were hung, drowned and even burned at the stake if they were classified as a witch. Belief in ghosts, malevolent spirits, witches and other elements of the supernatural was typical in Elizabethan times (the late 16th century). Witches were considered a physical manifestation of evil and a threat to society's moral and religious fiber. This was the era of witch hunts and witch trials, a period that lasted from 1400 to 1700, culminating in the famous Salem witch trials of the late 1600s. Under the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, England passed the 1562 Elizabethan Witchcraft Act forbidding "conjurations, enchantments and witchcraft's.


What year did the Nuremberg trials start?

The Nuremberg trials began in 1945 following the end of World War II. The trials were held to prosecute prominent leaders of Nazi Germany for war crimes and crimes against humanity.


Who was involved in the Salem witch trials?

Whole bunch of people and Villingers. the afflicted and the acused were the main people.