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Essay on The Theories of the Salem Witch Trials

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The Theories of the Salem Witch Trials

The Salem Witch trials and what caused them is very debatable. Some theories lead to Rye poisoning from bread to even people faking it. The most believable claim is that people were faking it. Everyone had a motive and they all just wanted to save themselves. It was a time when people were selfish and only cared for themselves.

This time in Salem was a troubling time, making it seem likely that satan was active (Linder). The townsfolk are believed to have been suffering from a strange psychological condition known as Mass Hysteria (Wolchover). Mass Hysteria is a condition affecting a group of persons, characterized by excitement or anxiety, irrational behavior or beliefs, or inexplicable symptoms of …show more content…

Studies have shown that as the climate varied from year to year during this cold period, lower temperatures resulted with higher numbers of witchcraft accusations (Wolchover). Something like a winter fuel shortage would have made for a fairly miserable colonial home, and "the higher the misery quotient, the more likely you are to be seeing witches." (Wolchover).

Another, but highly unbelievable theory is that witchcraft actually existed. Twenty people and along with two dogs were executed for the crime of witchcraft in Salem. One person was pressed to death under a pile of stones for refusing to testify. While many people in the period believed that witches had supernatural powers given to them by the devil, many of the better-educated people acknowledged that witchcraft was practiced, but any spells that were cast only had power in the minds of the witch and those that thought themselves bewitched (Krystek). Cotton Mather, a respected Puritan minister who was there the time of the trials, wrote an account of them for the governor. His essay clearly shows that he believed that some of the people who were hung in Salem were indeed guilty of using black magic to torment the "afflicted" girls (Krystek). To see if anyone was a so called “witch”, physical evidence was considered. Any birthmarks, moles, warts, or other blemishes were seen as possible portals through which Satan could enter a

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