We do not have any records of what Elizabethan witches (assuming there really was such a thing) might have thought about anything.
Around that era there were many who believed in the existence of witches and ghosts etc
Strange and unnatural events
Desribe the political climate in England during the time Shakspear was writing?
In Shakespeare's time, certain people were really frightened of witches and believed that they were a clear and present danger to their society. The history of the Salem Witch Trials is an example of this kind of fear, which was only starting in Shakespeare's day. Throughout the seventeenth century, fundamentalist religion became very powerful in England and even overthrew the monarchy, and it is religious fundamentalists who generally are frightened of witches.
The exact date when Shakespeare began writing is not known; it was between 1585 and 1592. This was during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, known as The Elizabethan Era or The Golden Age. This period is also called The Renaissance.
Audiences during Shakespeare's time considered witches and curses to be real and much scarier than todays audiences would.
During their second meeting, Macbeth is eager to hear more prophecies from the witches. He is intrigued and excited by their predictions and seeks them out willingly to learn more about his future. Macbeth's attitude towards the witches becomes more ambitious and demanding as he becomes more entrenched in his pursuit of power.
Around that era there were many who believed in the existence of witches and ghosts etc
Strange and unnatural events
Strange or unnatural events
Desribe the political climate in England during the time Shakspear was writing?
During those years Shakespeare was alive, and for many of them he was writing, which was a good thing.
In Shakespeare's time, certain people were really frightened of witches and believed that they were a clear and present danger to their society. The history of the Salem Witch Trials is an example of this kind of fear, which was only starting in Shakespeare's day. Throughout the seventeenth century, fundamentalist religion became very powerful in England and even overthrew the monarchy, and it is religious fundamentalists who generally are frightened of witches.
The exact date when Shakespeare began writing is not known; it was between 1585 and 1592. This was during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, known as The Elizabethan Era or The Golden Age. This period is also called The Renaissance.
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.
They thought that the Jews were their their aflictions and all sorts of stuff. Very similar to Hitler's views
It was called the Elizabethan age after Queen Elizabeth I of England who ruled from 1558 to her death in 1601. Shakespeare spent the first 37 years of his life during Elizabeth's reign and so naturally began his writing then. He continued writing into the Jacobean era, so named after King James I who came to the throne on Elizabeth's death. Shakespeare would have had a hard time writing, say, during the Victorian era which began 221 years after his death.