Salem witch trial

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    the Salem Witch Trials The Salem Witch Trials was an event that took place in colonial Massachusetts between 1692 and 1693. During this time, more than 200 residents were accused of practicing and participating in the Devils magic better known as witchcraft. Out of these 200 people, 20 were put to death. After these horrible events had been carried out, the colony admitted the trials were a mistake and helped salvage the families that had been effected by the events. So why did these trials take

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    The 1690s were a terrible time, full of accusations, lies and death, a scary time for all those in New England, especially in Salem, Massachusetts. The Salem Witch Trials were a result of a Puritan theocracy, in which the Puritans destroyed the lives of innocent women all the while believing they were doing the right thing. A Puritan theocracy meant that all aspects of the ruled area were controlled by the church. The Puritans were extremely strict about creating a perfect Puritan society, the oppression

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    The Salem Witch Trials of colonial Massachusetts is infamously known throughout the entirety of the world. This is consequently a result of the unessential executions of a collection of individuals. The bloodshed of the number of citizens is referred to as ‘unessential’ for the reason that the trials were surrounded by paranormal activity. Proof that the accused legitimately participated in demonic activities such as witchcraft was incapable of being found. Although this may be factual, the government

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    that believed in the bible, settled in America. They believed in witchcraft, and believed that people who study it should be executed. This led to many people being accused and executed. What made the Salem witch trials of 1692 such a threat and fear to the people of Massachusetts? The Salem witch trial hysteria of 1692 was caused by the fear of being possessed by the devil, by the fear of being accused and what your consequences would be, and lastly the belief of people being witches which was a crime

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    the Salem Witch Trials were quickly birthed, causing a wave of hysteria in Salem Village and Salem Town. Though the exact day and month are uncertain, historians can claim that the trials emerged in early 1692 and came to a close in 1693. The Salem Witch Trials started in 1692 with more than one hundred fifty people being accused of practicing witchcraft, and the trials finally ended with the courts declaring there was no evidence in the cases being tried, and the Governor stopped the trials because

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    States of America. The Salem Witch Trials have been sensationalized as of late, becoming a popular show, and an event that many movies have been made of. Without doing the proper research, one would think that the trials were more violent than it became. There were no witches burning at the stake, or daily hangings, or drownings, but people of the time were frightened nonetheless. The acts of just a few key people drove a whole town to hysteria, and fear. Throughout the trials over a hundred people

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    The Salem witch trials were unjustified in that they were bred out of paranoia and delusion; with religion was the mother of this breed. Even since the early periods of our nation, religious hysteria has haunted the land. The town of Salem, Massachusetts was not excluded from that.  The Salem witch trials are an evident case of religious delirium being harmful to innocent people, but no the only one. Dangerous people are still hysteric from religion in a modern world. The Salem witch trials began

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    In Salem, Massachusetts 1692, 134 people were accused as witches, 20 of them were put to death, 4 died in jail, but why? (Document A and B) Why did these people get accused of being a witch, a person possessed or controlled by the Devil? Well there was the strong belief in witchcraft and the Devil at the time, it didn’t help that the Bible said, “Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live” (Background Essay). That probably caused some uneasiness among everyone in Salem, but wasn’t enough to cause the

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    infamous Salem witch trials were a series of unfair hearings and prosecutions of people accused of witchcraft in colonial Massachusetts. These series of events of America's most notorious and well-known cases of mass hysteria, where more than 200 people were accused of practicing witchcraft. The trials resulted in the executions of twenty people. Fourteen of them were women, and all but one died by hanging. Five others, including two infant children, died in prison. The Salem Witch Trials began after

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    During the Salem Witch Trials, Bridget Bishop was not granted a fair trial due to legal issues with the court proceedings. If this trial were to happen again in modern time the trail and out come would have been drastically different. The Invisible World by Cotton Mather is an excellent example of how Bridget Bishop was granted a fair trail during the Salem Witch Trials. Cotton Mather was a very well educated man and respected member of the community. He graduated from Harvard at 16 with his undergraduate

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