The Salem witch trials were a progression of hearings and arraignments of individuals blamed for witchcraft in colonial Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693. The trial brought about the detainment of 141 individuals and twenty executions. Of those whom were executed, fourteen were ladies and everything except one was hanged, five others passed on in jail.
Twelve other women had been executed in earlier years in …show more content…
They lived intimately with the feeling of the powerful. The first 1629 Royal Charter of the Massachusetts Bay Colony was emptied in 1684, after which King James II introduced Sir Edmund Andros as the Governor of the Dominion of New England. Andros was removed in 1689 after the " Glorious Revolution" in England supplanted the Catholic James II with the Protestant co-rulers William and Mary. With the new pioneers set up, the English Puritans got away oppression and went to the New World. Be that as it may, because of the superstitious propensities of the group, they started seeking after women accused of witchcraft.
Before 1692, there had been bits of gossip about witchcraft in towns neighboring Salem Village and different towns. Cotton Mather, a minister of Boston's North church, wrote many pamphlets, including some that expressed his belief in witchcraft. In his book Memorable Providences Relating to Witchcrafts and Possessions, Mather describes his "oracular observations" and how "stupendous witchcraft" had affected the children of Boston mason John …show more content…
It has been utilized as a part of political talk as a striking counseling tale about the threats of religious extremism, isolationism, false accusations, and error in due process. It was not unique,but a Colonial American case of the much more extensive wonder of witch trials in the early present day time frame, which occurred additionally in England and France. Numerous historians consider the impacts of the trials to have been exceptionally powerful in back to back United States history. According to historian George Lincoln Burr, “the Salem witchcraft was the rock on which the theocracy