Do you believe in witches? Have you ever thought about how awesome it would be to teleport or move objects? For many girls in Salem, being called witch put them to death. Were they actually witches? What happened to them? Witches have fascinated many people throughout the years. Most people know they were killed, but not many know how.
According to history.com, the girls had many "big spasms, contortions, screaming, and writhing." Because of this, they were accused, diagnosed, and some even confessed to witchcraft. Modern theories suggest epilepsy, boredom, child abuse, mental illness, and a disease from rye, called convulsive ergotism. Most were killed, but it wasn 't just girls. Men were accused too, just not as much. If someone had so much
…show more content…
“Burning and hanging were the most popular forms of execution for accused witches.” People who hardcore believed in them and wanted the witches to die started groups who go on witch hunts. They go around and kill anyone who has any signs of being a witch. Some witches who were sentenced to death got pregnant to avoid getting killed for another nine months. They believed that the fetus was innocent and didn’t deserve being killed. They also could be spared if they admitted to being a witch and repented.
When it was over, the judge and people involved just apologized. We don’t know what happened to the bodies. Some say their family came and got the bodies to have a proper burial. Some were just cut down and dropped into a crevice on the side of Gallows Hill. In total, nineteen people were executed, two died in prison, and one died while being pressed under rocks. In conclusion, people believed they were witches because of tantrum-like fits. Their life was not happy and, for many, not long. Of everyone accused, most of them were killed, wither by hanging, burning, or getting attacked by an angry witch hunt. Though some were freed, most never got to see their family
Of those who confessed to being a witch, not one would be executed. All fifty-five people who confessed survived the crisis. Only those who refused to confess were put to death. All twenty-eight people to be tried by the Court of Oyer and Terminer would plead not guilty but would be found guilty and then put to death. Of those twenty-eight people, nine received temporary stays of execution due to pregnancy or to have time to prepare their
These people that were killed were accused of witchcraft. Witchcraft is the belief in powers and that you can do magical things like witches. People thought that witchcraft is evil and that is why many people got thrown in jail or killed after being accused. They even killed two dogs during the trials. They got this belief by believing the devil gave certain powers to people to become witches.
Accused and Betrayed Throughout the late 1600’s women had been accused of being a part of witchcraft. In this time women went through many disgusting torture treatments and got charged with many different things. When a women had been accused she would be “treated” with many different types of torture until they had died or had admitted to doing witchcraft. Some of the tortures were called: “The Garotte”,” Dunking the Witch”, and “The Boots”.
First, there were accusations on three women. Those three women were Tituba, a West Indian slave and two other women, Sarah Osborne and Sarah Good. These women were accused of witchcraft by teenage girls in 1692. There were up to 19 people hanged in Salem for witchcraft and one man was pressed to death for the suspicion of witchcraft. Accusing people for witchcraft was very dangerous in the 16th century.
This was considered to be witchcraft by the Reverend of Salem, but to avoid punishment of witchcraft the girls accused people of being witches. Those accused of being witches were condemned to hang in they denied being a witch. This is very similar to the way that Caucasian people would lynch or hang African Americans during the 1950s to 1960s in America.
While the witch trials were said to get rid of witches, who were bewitching people and ruining lives, it was unfair and cruel because they killed 19 innocent men, women, and children, 144 people were thrown in jail under harsh
Respected people such as Rebecca Nurse were hung with the accusation of witchcraft, and due to the nature of the crime, they were unable to either prove or disprove it, so she was put to death at the
They were then persecuted to trials to prove they weren’t a witch which often resulted in death most of the time. The
Many people believe that the witches in Salem were burned to death after being accused, however that was not the case. All of the accused witches but one were killed by being hung. The witch who wasn’t killed by getting hung was Giles Corey. Giles Corey was crushed by a boulder. The sheriff in Salem killed him because Giles Corey wouldn’t go on trial.
At the end of the Salem witch trials all the witches in the Salem witch trials were considered to be not guilty. Many of the charges were dropped but still 16 more people were convicted and indicted but 3 out of the 16 were killed who were Elizabeth Johnson Jr. ,Sarah Wardwell and Mary
Mental Illness in Salem Witch Trials Introduction Witchcraft is the practice of magic and the use of spells and the invocation of spirits. According to Salem Witch Trials, 2015, the Salem witch trials began during the spring of 1692, after a group of young girls in Salem, Massachusetts claimed to have been bewitched by several adults in the town. More than 150 people were accused and hung, including men, women, and children (Salem Witch Trials, 2015). There were three girls in particular that sparked the trials: Abigail Williams, Betty Parris, and Ann Putnam. Also stated in Salem Witch Trials, their behaviors changed drastically; they began to hallucinate, shout in church, have fits, not eat, not wake up, attempt to fly, and feel as if they
The accused witches in the Salem Witch Trials were blamed for many things. Like random deaths, out of the ordinary events, crops dying and many other things. The People accusing the "witches" would do many different test to see if they were witches. They would hold the accused witches underwater and if they drown then they weren't witches, if they were still alive they were witches and then got hung. So either way the people still died, guilty or not.
In Witches: The Absolutely True Tale Of Disaster In Salem by Rosalyn Schanzer people in the town of Salem were Condemned for being witches. By the end of it all more than 200 people were accused and 20 were executed. Horridly they accused people from all ages, everyone from teenager to ancient was accused. But why? The Salem Witch Trials were caused by hysteria, popularity, and revenge.
Bridget Bishop, a resident of Salem, was the first person to be tried as a witch. Surprisingly, Bishop was accused of witch craft by the highest number of witneses. After Bishop, more than two hundred people were tried of practicing witchcraft and twenty were executed. Many of these accusations arose from jealous, lower class members of society, especially towards women who had come into a great deal of land or wealth. Three young children by the names of Elizabeth, Abigail, and Ann were the first three people to be “harmed” by the witches.
Not many people know much about what actually happened in the Salem Witch Trials. Maybe someone would think that it was just about witchcraft and crazy people being hanged, but it is a lot more than that. The Salem Witch Trials only occurred between 1692 and 1693, but a lot of damage had been done. The idea of the Salem Witch Trials came from Europe during the “witchcraft craze” from the 1300s-1600s. In Europe, many of the accused witches were executed by hanging.