The Salem Witch Trials of 1692 Essay

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    could have been a highly complex, biased, and religious lie. The Salem Witch Trial Hysteria of 1692 took place in Salem, a city in colonial Massachusetts, and it was an event in which various people with certain characteristics were accused of being witches, or people possessed by the Devil himself. The Witch Trial Hysteria was caused by both the accusations of teenage, single girls against the panicking older, married women in Salem and the false honesty of the accusing girls. The accusers, who

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    In 1692 there were numerous hangings due to accusations of witchcraft. Young girls would pretend they were possessed so they would not be the ones to get punished for their lies. The people that would get accused could either “confess” and just sit in jail and have your name smeared through the mud or stand strong in what you believe in and be hanged for not confessing. What were the Salem Witch Trials? The Salem Witch Trials were a series of hearings and prosecutions of people accused of witchcraft

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    Salem Massachusetts is known around the world for the Salem witch trials. The Salem witch trail begin in January of 1692, in colonial Massachusetts in a village called Salem. A group of young girls claimed to be possessed by the devil and accused serval other locals of being witches and doing witchcraft. This went on for a few months. Hysteria spreads throughout the village. People were frightened not knowing who they could trust; Neighbors were turning on neighbors. The belief that certain humans

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    What Caused the Salem Witch Trial Hysteria of 1692? Between June 10 and September 22, 1692, 20 people were put to death in Salem Massachusetts for witchcraft. Neighbors turned on neighbors, women turned on women. Nobody was necessarily safe from being accused of witchcraft. During the time of the 1600s many English immigrants arrived in New England, a number of them being Puritans. They came to New England to practice Christianity in ways they felt were pure. To help guide the Puritans through life

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    Salem Witch Trials Flaming sermons, bewitched girls, accusations being thrown here and there, and executions terrified colonists during the Salem witch trials. The Salem witch trials are well known, but they are not the first in America and are very small compared to other witch hunts. In 1648 Margaret Jones was hanged for witchcraft in Massachusetts (Brooks). In Europe 110,000 people were questioned during the 1300s to the 1700s, and 40,000 to 60,000 people were executed (New World Encyclopedia)

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    Twenty people were put to death for witchcraft in Salem during the 1692 Salem Witch Trial Hysteria. In The Crucible, a woman, Elizabeth Proctor, gets accused of witchcraft by a young girl by the name Abigail Williams, who just so happens to be having an affair with Elizabeth’s husband, John. Once John finds out Abigail accused his wife, he starts trying to find proof that all of these young girls are pretending that they are being hurt by these older women, just so that they will be hanged. The officials

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    Salem Witch Trials

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    The Salem Witch Trials of 1692 were a series of trials in which twenty-four people were killed after being accused of practicing witchcraft. These trials were caused by different social climates of the area including the very strong lack of a governor, the split between Salem Village and Salem Town, and the strict puritan lifestyle during the time period. Tituba, the black slave, was a foreigner from Barbados. Her role in society was to take care of Mr. Parris’s family. Tituba’s situation contributed

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    Aspects of the Trials The Salem Witch Trials were disreputable experiences during the colonial era in New England where fourteen women and six men were killed for allegations of witchcraft in 1692 1 . The trials started as due to the mysterious and bizarre conduct of two girls who were distressed by violent seizures and strange hysterics that apparently rendered them with the inability to speak, hear, or see. Following a medical check and an assessment by Puritan clergy, it was concluded that the

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    “The Salem Witchcraft Trials exposed the dangers f unchecked suspicion, spectral evidence, and mass hysteria. Yet, human suspicion of one another continues.” (Hoffer, The Salem Witchcraft Trials). The Origins of Witchcraft Seventeenth century Massachusetts was a community fueled by the fear of the Devil and idea that he was constantly trying to find ways to destroy religious groups and their communities (History of Massachusetts). Witches were chosen specially by Satan to be given supernatural

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    irrepressible emotion or excitement, especially among a group of people. In Salem, Massachusetts, in 1692, hysteria rocked a small Puritan community. Over the span of four short months, nineteen people were hanged to death and another was pressed to death by stones. Puritans in the community accused one another of witchcraft—a crime punishable by death—and so hysteria swept the village. The causes of the Salem Witch Trials of 1692 remain a mystery to this day; however, religious, economical, and social

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