preview

Causes Of The Witch Craze

Good Essays

The witch craze rapidly spread around Europe from 1480 to 1700, especially during the time of both the Protestant and Catholic Reformation. From accusations to trials to persecution, over a million Europeans were tried due to witchcraft suspicions. The trials were often rigged in favor of the accusers, and torture was used as a method for confession in certains areas of Europe. The witch craze had many contributing factors that allowed it to last for almost three hundred years. Three major reasons for the persecution of individual witches were influence from religious superstitions promoted by the Church, lack of advanced knowledge in science and medicine and social prejudice against the lower socioeconomic class. Religious leaders condemned witches and spread the idea that witches work for the devil. When higher power religious leaders acknowledged the existence of witches and the detrimental effects of witches in society, it fostered fear among the people, which encouraged accusation against many individuals. In Doc B3, Martin Luther says that “witches are the Devil’s whores who steal milk, rise storms...torture babies in their cradles…[and] that the Devil is unable to do these things by himself.” After Martin Luther preached about the threats, dangers, and horrible things witches do, the European people were instilled with fear and were determined to put an end to the spread of witches through persecution. Even Pope Innocent VIII ordered the people that it was their

Get Access