The Salem Witch Trials begin in 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts. It was a series of chazak using men and women practicing witchcraft with led to a lot of conflict among the people in the Village of Salem. Many people were scared because they did not want to be accused of practicing witchcraft. This event led to many Family Feud's and religious Fanatics and people constantly living in fear. Although there are many women who are on trial for practicing witchcraft are also men who were accused of witchcraft. Over 200 people were accused of Witchcraft and about 140 to 150 people were arrested. There are 19 people who are hanged and one was tortured to death. If someone is that they would have to go in front of a judge and also tried in court and it…
When one usually thinks about the Salem Witch Trials, they tend to imagine the colonial rabble, often male, accusing and indiscriminately burning women who they saw as witches at the stake. This idea is proven false when we look at the records and realize that the vast majority of women accused of being witches were being accused by other women. Woman is Salem were more likely than men to be both the accused and the accusers due to the culture that revolved around women in which they were very often upkeepers of morals in their communities. This put them at constant blows with those who didn’t conform to the traditional rules in place in their Puritan society. Through this we can understand that the reason why women were more often both the…
There was once a small town called Salem, it had been home to many witches, warlocks, supernatural ghosts and creatures that you would hear in many horror stories until one day all of them had been slaughtered and burnt down by the travellers who call themselves humans and settled down in this town of Salem and called it ‘Shadow valley’ which was situated in north Carolina. Centuries later, Shadow valley was like any normal town and its past histories of witches, ghosts, warlocks and so on, were long forgotten. Many of the families, who live here, were descendants of the travellers who had first settled down centuries ago. They were called to as the founding families since their great great grandfathers and grandmothers were the ones who had…
The Salem Witch trials were started in 1692. But why? According to History.com, a group of girls claimed to be possessed with the devil and that they were practicing witchcraft. This event may have caused the trials to begin. These girls were from Salem Village, which is how the “Salem Witch Trials” got their name. Many doctors in the village were diagnosing children with bewitchment starting earlier that year. These practices did not go on for long, but were very devastating.…
Karla Estrada History 1301 Fall 2014 Extra Credit SWCT The Salem Witchcraft Trials began in the 1690’s in Salem, Massachusetts and then later spread to other parts of New England. These trials resulted in the execution of about 20 people, most of them women, and innocent people. Hundreds of other individuals including men, women, and children were accused; dozens were kept in prison without trials, and a couple even died in prison. A wave of hysteria spread all over Massachusetts, when a group of girls began to display an odd and bizarre behavior. Over hundreds of years, historians have been trying to elaborate a conclusion and explain why Americans in the seventeenth-century became so committed to the idea of satanic rituals and scheming. There are many different interpretations of the Salem Witchcraft Trials, some of which include, ergot, lack of sunlight, and hysteria.…
Act Three Questions Directions On a separate sheet of paper, please answer each part of each question asked below. Please use complete sentences and please answer the question as asked. 1. As the act opens, who is being interrogated and on what charge Martha Corey is being interrogated by Judge Hathorne on the charge of telling fortunes (witchery). 2. What is interesting about the dialogue at the beginning of this act What was Miller trying to suggest about the tone of the legal proceedings to follow This indirect dialogue (off stage / only heard, not seen) suggests that although people will talk / be heard, the truth will not be seen / acknowledged. 3. What is Mary Warren now prepared to tell the court Mary Warren is prepared to the court that the girls have only been sporting, or pretending. They honestly have never seen or known a witch and theyve only lied to protect themselves by throwing suspicion on others. 4. What two facts about John Proctor does Ezekiel Cheever feel compelled to reveal to Danforth Ezekiel Cheever feels compelled to tell Deputy Governor Danforth that John tore up the arrest warrant for Elizabeth when Cheever served it and that Proctor sometimes plows on Sunday. 5. What compromise, or deal, does Danforth offer to Proctor What is Proctors response Why does he respond this way Because Elizabeth claims that she is pregnant, Danforth offers to not try her until after shes delivered her child if Proctor will drop the charge against the court that the proceedings have been unjust. Proctor said that he could not accept that plea because his friends wives, who are also innocent, have been charged and they need to be freed. He feels that the truth needs to come out to protect all of the innocent people. 6. How do Hathorne and Parris persuade Danforth to respond to the deposition that lists ninety-one supporters of Rebecca, Elizabeth, and Martha Corey Hathorne and Parris persuade Danforth that all of the ninety-one supporters must be…
The Salem Witch Trials of 1692 and 1693 as a very dark event for early America. The Salem Witch Trials were trials of people accused of witchcraft. The citizens of Salem caused the deaths of twenty people, most of them women. The research being abundant, I could gather many opinions expressed about the Salem Witch Trials. Particularly, the author’s opinions showed the trials and prosecutions were biased against women because women were not treated equal to men, “Puritan ministers convinced the congregations that women were going to hell they had committed no sin” (Kizer), and stereotypes ran Salem’s community.…
The Salem witch trials began when the 9-year-old daughter of reverend Samuel Parris and his niece were diagnosed as being under Satan’s influence. The Salem witch trials were an inhumane and unfair series of hearings and prosecutions of people accused of witchcraft in colonial Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693. The trials resulted in the executions of twenty people, also four other accused and an infant child died in prison.…
What Caused the Salem Witch Trial Hysteria of 1692? The year 1692 marked a major event in history in the town of Salem, Massachusetts. During the year 1692, Salem, a colony filled with Puritans who believe in religion very strongly, but as their beliefs grow, the more the people were starting to die. The problem or question is what caused the Salem witch crisis hysteria of 1692? There were many causes for the Salem witch trial hysteria but the possible three main reasons were the conflicts between young and older women, the “afflicted” girls were acting throughout the trial, and the town’s differences in wealth and power.…
Breaking the law was no joke back in colonial times. Punishment were extremely harsh. The convict will be punished by physical pain or sometimes death. Do to the poor judgment from the court's most of the accused were innocent. Even the defendants of the accused were punished, if the accused were proven guilty. One of the crimes that were taken really seriously was Witchcraft, which was punished by death. A lot of innocent women died during those year in Salem. The punishments for crime in colonial times were not fair.…
The belief in witchcraft, or supernatural actions and the devil’s ability to give certain humans the power to harm others, in return for their loyalty, had been a part of traditional village culture in Europe since the 14th century. (history.com) The Salem witch trials took place between 1692 and 1693 in colonial Massachusetts. Two hundred people were accused of witchcraft and twenty people were executed. (smithsonianmag.com)…
Living as we do in the 20th century, the charges imposed on people throughout New England during the 1680s and 1690s seem preposterous. Any behavior regarded as strange by fellow citizens was sufficient to hold a trial with a sentence of death. Though such scenarios seem unfathomable in our modern culture, it was a reality for hundreds of New England settlers. The causes of the famous outbreak of witch trials in Salem, Massachusetts are rooted in social, economic, and political aspects of the late 17th century Salem community.…
The Salem Witch Trials brought a lot of bad consequences when they misjudge a lot of people in Salem, Massachusetts when they were all in fear of something they didn't know what it was . Even though the lesson from the Salem Witch Trials about the mass hysteria it's still repeated in modern times . People let their fear or panic take over their decision in life . When people are scared they don't tend to stop and think about their decisions and just go with what they think is right ,even when they are wrong.…
It has been two years since everything happened in Salem, my old hometown. I was the leader of the circle girls but I didn't mean to accuse so many people of witchcraft. All I really wanted was John Proctor. I wanted to become his wife even though that met to accuse her wife of witchcraft and all the people of Salem. After doing all of these my plan did not turn out how I wanted. I had to run away from Salem and have a better life but it did not turn out that way.…
“About 139 people have been falsely accused in 2014, and the numbers have increased since,” according to the Huffington Post. When people are thrown into jail, their lives change and they become a different person; additionally, the ones around them also see them differently. Of the many falsely accused people, Brian Banks was a victim of a modern day witch-hunt that changed his life.…