Witch trials

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    of or about the Salem witch trials? Or anything like the witch hunts? Well I have and say that Betty & Abigail were acting because if you have seen or read articles about the Salem witch Trials you could notice as I did that Betty & Abigail and the other girls were just joking. And that they were only doing the supposed bewitched or possessed acting to blame someone whom was tracking down their steps. And other times they would act up only when when they saw the accused witch. And I am going prove

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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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    The Salem Witch Trials

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    so strong to be studied and participated in. Religions that divided from Christianity and Catholic beliefs, such as Puritans, who had a clear vision of what their churches were going to be like. Witchcraft had been a crime a long time before the trials in the Massachusetts Bay Colony and prior

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    Salem Witch Trials

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    As flawed people, achieving perfection is an impossible task. Yet, despite this inevitability, individuals strive for perfection only to reveal and witness imperfections. The Puritan lifestyle attempted to achieve this unattainable mission by setting strict morals upon the people of Salem, Massachusetts, however they struggled to do so. Salem faced a major change as a result of the Puritan ambition. Because of their thought on the ideal community as a straitlaced society, those who portrayed an imperfect

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    The notorious witch trials in Salem began in Spring of 1692. This started after a young group of girls in Salem Village, Massachusetts, professed they were possessed by the devil. These young girls even went as far as accusing some local women of practicing witchcraft. As a frenzy spreaded throughout colonial Massachusetts, a specific court was summoned to hear cases. Bridget Bishop was the first convicted witch and she was hung in that June following her trial. Eighteen other people followed Bishop

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    Witch Trials Deception

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    few to have realized that they were lying the entire time? In 1692 during the Salem Witch Trials, an association of adolescent girls had been seen dancing and singing in the woods, and they were immediately accused of witchcraft regardless of the plenty of evidence provided as to how it was not witchcraft. The girls quickly came to notice that they either had to put the blame on others or confess to being a witch. They acted as if they had seen the devil and were bewitched, continuing to give accusations

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    The Salem Witch Trials

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    "You 're a liar! I 'm no more a witch than you are a wizard! If you take my life away, God will give you blood to drink!" (Sarah Good). To this day, there is still so much speculation on what was the actual cause of the hysteria that was the Salem Witch Trials. Were any of the women accused, like Sarah Good, actually practicing witchcraft? Or were the accusations placed on these women placed out of spite or jealousy? What caused these young women to have these strange symptoms in the first place

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    The Salem witchcraft trials took place in colonial Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693. The news of witches began to spread in Salem when a group of young girls gathered together in the kitchen of the Reverend Samuel Parris with his Indian slave named Tituba to experiment with witchcraft. After these young girls began to portray unusual behavior the village doctor came to the scene and diagnosed the girls to be possessed by the devil. The news of the presence of witches spread throughout

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    story stayed the same throughout each interrogation and lined up with each of the four girls’ stories. Her confession was believable because she used many of the witch stereotypes and much of what was thought to be witch jargon for that time period. Tituba’s mentioning that there were nine other witches in Salem set off panic. A witch-hunt began to track down the nine who remained unknown. Eventually Sarah Good was convicted and executed by hanging and Sarah Osburn died in jail before being executed

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    The Salem Witch Trials

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    confidence in our own ability to create something superior to those governments that have come before us. This causes us to neglect to face the corruption present in our own lives. Most people can recall when they first learned about the Salem Witch trials that occurred in 1693 because they were shocked and horrified that the townspeople let these events take place and spiral. What people do not realize is that they are like the townspeople in Salem, Massachusetts and similar injustices and dangerous

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