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    Salem Witch Trials

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    The Salem Witch Trials I: Introduction Attention Getter: During the Salem Witch Trials‚ about 200 people would be accused of Witchcraft‚ 19 would be executed as witches‚ and one man is his 80’s would be put to death by stacking stone upon stone on his chest. General Purpose: To educate my audience about the Salem Witch Trials. Specific Purpose: My purpose is to display to you the power of fear in a place like Salem‚ or any place when they have the “witch hunt mentality.” Thesis

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    Heinrich Kramer. He was one of the (inquisitor of the Catholic Church) along with Jacob Sprenger. Sprenger is also often attributed as an author basically saying that witchcraft did exist. It was submitted to the University on May 9‚ 1487 for endorsement. In 1490 this book was banned by Pope Paul IV. By the 15th century witchcraft had resurfaced and had its penalties‚ the Malleus was used as a judicial case-book for the detection and persecution of witches. It served as a guidebook and was designed

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    Bacon's Rebellion

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    The three topics that reflected the colonial society included Bacon’s rebellion (1676)‚ Salem Witchcraft trails (1692)‚ and the Stono River Bridge Slave Rebellion (1739). All three rebellions/trials have reflected the views of tension in colonial society because they have reflected the issues of government‚ slavery‚ the citizens‚ and the transformation of culture. The Bacon Rebellion took place in Jamestown‚ Virginia in the year 1676‚ which was led by Virginia Settlers led by Nathaniel Bacon

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    Witch Hunt Dbq

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    patriarchy” the Reformation enforced women’s roles in a marriage as the subordinate‚ always subject to man. This compelled men and women to accuse women of witchcraft if they strayed from these values. The poor quality of life‚ along with crises and wars lead people to bring power back in their hands‚ forcing petty disputes to be settled with witchcraft accusations. All these factors lead people to question what was happening‚ and because they had no answer they turned to the evil witches‚ who could be

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    trace its origins. The widespread witch craze in Europe is not a simplistic reaction as it is portrayed in the media but rather a build up of frustration at the political‚ social‚ and religious institutions throughout the continent. The idea of witchcraft in Europe‚ through a myriad of wars that fractioned society based upon belief‚ alongside support from the Catholic Church and misogynistic views surrounding the female body‚ caused a demon ideology to turn into a rampant and crazed fanaticism with

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    In the late spring of 1962 in a village name Salem a group of young girls claimed to possessed name such as the devil. These young girls accused some of the women’s from the village of doing witchcraft. There were also around 150 mans including the woman’s and children accused of witchcraft leading to nineteen men and women to be hanged. Three reasons why led this people to believe was “the teenage boredom”‚ the stimulation of imaginations of Tituba‚ and a belief that Satan was recruiting witches

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    Betty Parris‚ 9 years old and Abigail Williams‚ 11 years old began acting strangely. They began by having “fits” that could not be explained by the local doctor. The doctor who had no explanation for the fits or convulsion like symptoms deemed it witchcraft. This was the beginning of the hysteria that developed in the village and the beginning of the Salem Witch Trials. The people of Salem Village‚ who were Puritans‚ settled there to escape religious persecution for their beliefs. They wanted to

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    "The Devil in the Shape of a Woman‚" written by Carol Knudson‚ is about the accusations of witches in New England during the 17th century. Knudson focused the book on the reasons why women were accused of being witches‚ and how they were punished. The government in New England seemed to point the finger at women who fit into two categories. "Most witches in New England were middle-aged or older women eligible for inheritances" (p. 117). The categories that Knudson focused most on were gender

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     which was powered by  paranoia and fear.The Salem Witch Trials were the examinations‚ trials‚ and executions of  alleged “Witches” beginning in late February 1692 and ending in late October 1692.  Many  guiltless  individuals  were subject to witchcraft‚ that resulted in 19 men and women hung to  death‚ 17 that died in contaminated prisons‚ and one man that pressed with death by stones  screaming bloody murder. Why did the Salem Witch Trials occur? Were these Trials relevant?  Or were they really the devil’s work

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    Katherine Harrison- An Explanation Behind the Madness Although witchcraft is commonly associated with the Salem Witch Trials of 1692‚ there were also other trials throughout the century across colonial New England. It is important to look at some of these other trials also in order to see their cultural and historical impacts. The impacts are often overlooked because all of the attention tends to be put towards the Salem trials. One trial in particular‚ the 1669 trial of Katherine Harrison‚ is interesting

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