In a Puritan prison one was not allowed to wear clothes, and not given food. Prisoners were forced to live upon the donations of the jailers.
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the children were treated like adults
Great awakening preachers like Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield challenged puritan's beliefs by emphasizing their beliefs in the power of science.
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because he had served in Cromwell's Puritan government.
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it was SILENCE I KILL YOU
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Puritan classrooms were small. In most cases, the Puritan classrooms were also used for other reasons, such as holding church preachings and court hearings.
Puritan leaders had banned Anne Hutchinson from Massachusetts because Hutchinson criticized Puritan ministers. She also held meetings in her home where men and women talked about religion. Puritan leaders did not like this.
The prison in "The Scarlet Letter" is referred to as the "jail" or "gaol" in the novel. It is where Hester Prynne is initially held before her public shaming and serves as a symbol of the strict Puritan society's justice system.
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Hawthorne contrasts the prison door, symbolizing punishment and confinement, with the rosebush, symbolizing beauty and redemption. The prison door represents the harsh reality of Puritan society, while the rosebush suggests the possibility of hope and transformation. This contrast highlights the themes of sin and redemption in the novel.
It was illegal to be a Presbyterian in England. The Puritans were thrown in prison. A group of businessmen bought a charter and the land for Massachusetts Bay from the king. They got the Presbyterian leadership out of prison and they went to Massachusetts Bay. They took a number of their followers with them. You can go to Boston, England, and see the jail that held the Puritan Fathers.