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Salem Witch Trials

The Salem witch trials were a series of hearings conducted in Colonial Massachusetts beginning in 1692 to prosecute people accused of witchcraft. Of the dozens convicted of witchcraft, 19 were executed by hanging.

929 Questions

Why did people tolerate atrocities committed during the Salem Trials?

The people of Salem had no explanation for what ailed the afflicted and were afraid of it. Blaming witches and attempting to get rid of those witches was one of the only things they could do. Also, at the time, religion played a part in the law and government, so it would be simple to try them for witchcraft, that was actually a felony.

How were the people of Salem killed?

The victims of the trials were hanged. However, Giles Corey was pressed to death under stones when he refused to enter a plea during his trial.

What is the political effects of the Salem witch trials?

The Salem witch trials gave a reason for the use of spectral evidence in trial to be banned in court, something that hadn't happened before.

How did they kill Salem witches?

They usually hung, burnt, drowned, or cut them to death.

EDIT:

At Salem, they only hung the convicted witches. Burning was a Continental European punishment. Drowning was part of the water test and if you drowned you were innocent. And "cut" I can only explain as beheading. The only person accused of witchcraft to be beheaded was Anne Bolynn, and that was because she was convicted of treason.

How were witch trials different in Europe and the US?

Halucinations linked to a mold that grows on wheat caused many Europeans who were Christian zealots to see devils and scary bible things. In their myopic world the only way that they could explain their haluciantions was to say that it was something demonic. The Europeans were done with their witch trials when it hit America. They had learned from them, but America had to experience it for herself. Again religious zealots who don't think highly of women, expecially old single women, made sport out of burning them alive and giving them impossible trials that no one could survive. Under torture a person would be forced to name another "witch", if that person gave a name, then the next person would be tortured and killed. The American witch trials were sparked from the over active imagination of a few adolecent girls. They continued because religious men and councel men gained power by governing over who was going to live and who was going to die and how. This probably provided great entertainment just as the blood sports of the Roman age had. It was also a great way to have someone whom offended you or that you were jealous of killed. The trials document how brutal and ruthless humans can be even to their next door neighbors of whom they depended on for survival in early America. sad, sick and true.

Why did the Salem witch scare come about?

The scare began when girls and young women in Salem village began to have epilspsy-like "fits." We don't know why those fist began. Back in the day, the girls were bewitched. Now, we think they were physically or mentallly ill or maybe were poisoned.

What were the causes of mass hysteria during the Salem witch trials?

Mass hysteria caused by an over zealous religious faith all fueled by superstition, panic, and rumor. Tituba, A West Indian indentured servant recently imported to a household in Salem, had been telling stories and folklore about demons and spells to several young girls who, in turn, spread the stories through the neighborhood. Such stories of witches and demons and spells to ward them off or attract them had always been in circulation, but under the influence of an "authority" like Tituba, they took root in the minds of some very impressionable adolescent girls and spread.

Why were women killed for being a witch?

Because back then they thought that witches were really bad people so the people who they thought were witches actually weren't it was just a disease that people were getting from eating really moldy bread.

Are people still hanged in America?

Yes Washington st. The inmate can pick this as their means of execution

Hiding places for witches in Salem witch trials?

If you wanted to get away from acussations, you just had to leave Essex County. There was really nowhere to hide in Salem.

In relation to the Salem Witch Trials what was the difference between the being afflicted with witchcraft and being accused of witchcraft?

You have to understand the terminology of the era. The common belief was that the devil was summoned and would then proceed to possess the practcioners. The affliction would refer to such an event. The accusation would be the courts ruling regarding the alleged afflicted.

What was the puritan involvement in the Salem witch trials?

there were at the centre of it, it was a relgious court that pressed Giles Corey to his death, and them who were involved in partially exasibathing the hysteria

EDIT:

The Puritans were the only religious group in Essex County. Everyone who was invovled believed in the Puritan teachings.

How do historians interpret the events of the Salem witch trials?

They interpreted them as a religious punishment and as way for people to get rid of others, the people accused as witches were often accused because of some religious thing they did or because someone didn't like them and if they got enough people to testify against the accused then the accused would die.

What were the soldiers protected from with mock trials?

The Administration of Justice Act of 1774 was one of the acts passed that protected British troops by allowing their trial to be moved to a new venue. It was passed to give troops a fair trail.

Who the first women to be hanged?

Smt. Rattan Bai Jain was the first woman convict hanged in the republic of India. She was hanged in New Delhi on 03.01.1955 for the murder of three girls by poisoning.

Who were the first people to be accused during the Salem Witch Trials?

The religious zealots. <----- This answer is not true. The real truth is that in 1688, Samuel Parris was invited to preach at the church in Salem, Massachusettes, and to bring his family, his wife, Elizabeth, his six-year-old daughter Betty, niece Abagail Williams, and his Indian slave Tituba. The village girls were caught fortune-telling with Tituba, and to save themselves, blamed older women and men of being in league with the devil, and forcing them to do witchcraft. The accusers were all young girls. 25 people died between June 10th and October 1st, 1692.

What happened to Betty Paris after the Salem witch trials?

Betty Parris was the first to be afflicted and made the fewest accusations. It is clear to modern historians that even if the girls were lying, Betty had a legitimate illness that possibly gave the others the idea for their act.

Why do you think Miller might have chosen the Salem witch trials of 1692 How does this setting serve his dramatic and thematic goals?

By picking and choosing facts about the Trials, Miller could make it work for a close to obvious allusion to McCarthyism, yet it was different enough that no one could accuse him of being against a government policy or of being against said policy because he was a communist.

Who made the occousations Salem witch trials?

ann rinaldi

EDIT:

The Salem Witch Trials is not an effin' book! They were a series of trials for witchcraft in 1692 Salem that condemned 19 innocent people.

Ann Rinaldi has written fiction about the witch panic in Salem. Worthwhile books about the trials include:

The Enemy Within by John Demos

In the Devil's Snare by Mary Beth Norton

Witch Hunt by Marc Aronson

A Fever in Salem by Laurie Carlson.

How did the people of Salem have to dress in 1692?

the women in 1666 wore big dresses that stuck out and under neath the cotton and material of the dress was a big metal brace and it was very un compfortable for the ladies

Who was the first person killed in the Salem witch trials?

Bridget Bishop was the first person to die in the Salem witch trials. Bridget Bishop was one of nineteen people executed for witchcraft in Salem, Massachussetts, in 1692. Born some time in the 1630s, Bishop had was on her third marriage by the time the witch craze began. Bridget had one daughter, Christian Oliver, by her second husband in 1667, and married Edward Bishop, a lumber worker, in 1685.

Bridget was well-known in her neighborhood. She publicly fought with all of her husbands, dressed flamboyantly (although for Puritans, that just meant she liked to wear big hats and a red bodice with her black dress), and was the mistress not one but two taverns. She developed a reputation for entertaining into the wee hours of the night, playing forbidden games such as shuffle board, and generally being the target of much speculation and gossip. In other words, Bridget Bishop didn't seem to care what society thought of her - and because of that, she became a likely target when the accusations began.

How many people were hung in Salem witch trials?

There were over 160 people accused of being involved in witchcraft - 19 were hanged and 1 was pressed to death. Also, there were five accused that died in the Salem Village jail (there may be as many as 13 more people who died in the Salem but the sources don't match, so no one knows), and there was one man who was crushed to death by having large stones pressed on him.

This site tells a lot about the Witch trials, the people who died, and where they lived:

http://www.rootsweb.com/~macsalem/salem_witchcraft.htm

Why do some of the people of Salem confess to being witches when they are not?

they stack blocks of wood on u and continue to add more until u confess.

That only occurred in a single case: Giles Corey's. The reason some people confessed was the mercy showed to confessors. Ie, they were granted forgiveness and imprisoned for however long instead of excuted. Those who did not confess felt it better to die for telling the truth than live because they lied.