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Salem Witch Hunt Research Paper

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American History – HY 1110-15L-15 Unit II – Scholarly Activity – Salem Witch Hunt By LeQuay Marsh – 218182 It is extremely challenging to know with a great deal of certainty what happened in 1692 in Salem. However, there are many otherwise reliable sources that suggest that the Salem Witch Hunt began when multiple females from the Village of Salem began demonstrating odd behavior including strange fits with insane responses followed by a mixture of crying and laughing, unintelligible speech, endeavors to fly, and entering into a phase something like that of a trance. This peculiar behavior allegedly began shortly after mysteriously sessions with an Indian slave named Tituba from the Caribbean. During these sessions, the girls would chant with …show more content…

Many young women were tested and approximately 19 were alleged to have been witches after examination. These women were labeled as having been tormented by the Devil and guilty of practicing witchcraft. Therefore, they were turned into the local authorities where they would face the most serious of penalties, the death penalty. Generally, this death was delivered by fire where the accused would be tied to a stake and set aflame. The proof that proved sufficient to warrant conviction and death, according to Woolf, was primarily the testimony of those who claimed to have witnessed the accused women practicing witchcraft or demonstrating odd behaviors similar to those previously described. In retrospect, this judicial procedure might best be described as an unconventional massive public panic that had begun to spread throughout the neighboring villages. The numbers of those accused of witchcraft began to grow very quickly and, before long, women of various societal stature also found themselves among the …show more content…

In Massachusetts during the seventeenth century, there was an awareness of the concepts of Satan. The people believed that the devil sought opportunities to invade and destroy Christians and the people affiliated with those of faith according to Robinson. This caused a heightened sense of fear in some which enabled the encounters with the Indian Slave Tituba to function, in essence, as a trigger or catalyst for panic and grave concern that their perceived worse fears were becoming a reality. While there were quite possibly many innocent women burned at the stake, there were some women that identified themselves as witches operating under the influence of Satan. This instigated the hysteria and panic that would very quickly escalate into a hunt and immobilization of those believed to have been possessed before the practices could spread

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