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Witchcraft In Early Modern Europe

Decent Essays

The notion of witchcraft has been around long before the witch trials in Early Modern Europe. Different cultures have different images and stereotypes on what a witch is and what “magical” abilities he or she may possess. Many people however, did not look at these “magical” men and women as bad until the Holy Roman Empire began to look negatively on those people who were different, and opposed the norm set by the elites. Driven by fear, those living under the control of the Holy Roman Empire would began to blame other people for diabolical actions, or malicious activities. Women and some men, were tortured and tested in cruel ways in attempt of finding evidence or gaining a confession that the accused was a witch. Laws about how which were persecuted …show more content…

Before the English Civil War began, the legal system included justices, judges, magistrates, and lawyers. King James I, according to author Malcolm Gaskill in his works Witchcraft and Evidence in Early Modern England, had a great influence in the court systems. Before the English Civil War, the witch trials were broken up in two parts. The first being that a Justice of the Peace would examine the accused, then the second was an actual trial would occur. In those trials according to Gaskill, “English trials followed common- law principles: lay jurors had to be persuaded by lay witnesses.” Many trials during this time period demanded more solid proof before the accused could be convicted. Gaskill, also writes that the court systems prior to the Hopkins’ witch trials, people began to question intangible evidence coming from the accusers and the witnesses. This shows that before the English Civil War, the courts where yes, being tried for witchcraft, but the courts were also demanding solid evidence against the accused person. During the late sixteenth century and early years of the seventeenth century, many trials were being questioned by

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