The Salem Witch Trials of 1692 Essay

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    The Salem Witch Trial Of 1692 The Salem Witch Trials were a huge part of history, full of controversy and mystery, it confused historians today and in the past. The Trial’s killed approximately 20 people and 14 of them were women, mostly killed by hanging. Many people were convinced that children and women could be witches, and that’s why these short lasting trials went down in history. The Witch Trials started off when a group of girls claimed to be possessed and acted weirdly, they also accused

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    The Salem Witch Trials The start of Witch Trials first took place in Europe in the 1300’s. However, in the year 1692, the Witch Trials had made their way into America; changing history forever. The Witch Trials took place in a town named Salem, Massachusetts. The idea of witchcraft feared many of the townspeople because they thought that the devil gave power to the witches as a reward for staying loyal to him (“The Salem Witch Trials”). In January of 1692, ten girls played a fortune telling

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    colonists. What is the reason there was so much hysteria during the Salem witch Trial of 1692? The Salem Witch Trial hysteria of 1692 was caused by the fear of being accused or hung for the crime of practicing witchcraft, the belief that people could be witches, a crime worthy of death, and the paranoia of possibly being possessed by the devil. There was much hysteria due to the fear of the consequences during the Salem Witch Trials for practicing witchcraft. There was one main consequence for

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    There were many things that caused the Salem Witch Trials of 1692. One of the things that caused the Salem Witch Trials started with Parris’s, the one who experienced these things first, Indian Slave, Tituba. Tituba even admitted to being a witch and said that four women and one man were causing the strange illnesses. Another thing that caused the Salem Witch trials was an accused victim, Abigail Hobbs. She claimed to have seen the devil, which she said made her make a covenant with him, which

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    Salem Witch Trials 1692–1693 An infamous episode in American history, the Salem witch trials of 1692 resulted in the execution by hanging of fourteen women and five men accused of being witches. In addition, one man was pressed to death by heavy weights for refusing to enter a plea; at least eight people died in prison, including one infant and one child; and more than one hundred and fifty individuals were jailed while awaiting trial. Due to the survival of many relevant records, including notes

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    was pressed to death during the Salem Witch Trials Hysteria of 1692. (Document A) Because of actors and attention seekers, neighbor conflicts, and gender, marital status, and age, many people were executed. (video notes) The Salem Witch Trials Hysteria of 1692 was a tragic period of time when many innocent people lost their lives and people lived in fear. (video notes) In England, Pope Innocent VIII had declared heresy to witchcraft. (video notes) Since then, witch hunts had been held for over 300

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    The Salem Witch Trials of 1692 started because of two children’s fits and ended with at least 150 imprisonments and even 23 deaths. Helen Mondloch details this horrific time in her article “Blessed and Bedeviled,” when the Puritan people of Salem, Massachusetts believed in God and that everything is a result of someone else’s actions. This is proven by Helen’s information, author Richard Dorson’s arguments, and other historians telling of the time of the trials. They believed that all luck was from

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    It has been said many times that history repeats itself but we often don’t get an example of how this is. One such example is the crucible about the 1692 Salem witch trials relates to the 1950’s red scare. These two brutal times in history really may not look obviously related to each other but deeper into the story it becomes more apparent that they are fundamentally the same. The similarity’s become more apparent when you look at The Crucible than we will change perspective and look at the red

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    The Salem Witch Trials of 1692 was first brought about as a game by young adolescent girls in Salem Village, Massachusetts. The young girls had falsely claimed they were possessed by devilish beings which were innocent men and women of Salem Village causing an uproar of witchcraft in their village. I believe the great hysteria of the Salem Witch Trials was solely out of boredom, meaning it was a break from the norm and caused excitement quite easily. Those who were accused went to “trial” but given

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    The Salem Witch Trials started in 1692, when a doctor was called to examine a group of teenage girls, who would act strangely by barking like dogs, throwing tantrums, and be seen performing dances in the woods. After the doctor gave them a thorough examination, he diagnosed them with bewitchment. The community came to the conclusion that punishment should be delivered to the person who did the bewitching. In July of 1692, a nine year old girl named Elizabeth Parris, the daughter of local reverend

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