The Salem witch trials began with the accusation of people in Salem of being
witches. But the concept of witchcraft started far before these trials and false
accusations occurred. In the early Christian centuries, the church was
relatively tolerant of magical practices. Those who were proved to have
engaged in witchcraft were required only to do penance. But in the late
Middle Ages (13th century to 14th century) opposition to alleged witchcraft
hardened as a result of the growing belief that all magic and miracles that did
not come unambiguously from God came from the Devil and were therefore
manifestations of evil. Those who practiced simple sorcery, such as village
wise women, were increasingly regarded as practitioners of diabolical
witchcraft. They came to be viewed as individuals in league with Satan.
Nearly all those who fell under suspicion of witchcraft were women, evidently
regarded by witch-hunters as especially susceptible to the Devil?s
blandishments. A lurid picture of the activities of witches emerged in the
popular mind, including covens, or gatherings over which Satan presided;
pacts with the Devil; flying broomsticks; and animal accomplices, or familiars.
Although a few of these elements may represent vestiges of pre-Christian
religion, the old religion probably did not persist in any organized form
beyond the 14th century. The popular image of witchcraft, perhaps inspired
by features of occultism or ceremonial magic as well as by theology
concerning the Devil and his works of darkness, was given shape by the
inflamed imagination of inquisitors and was confirmed by statements obtained
under torture. The late medieval and early modern picture of diabolical
witchcraft can be attributed to several causes. First, the church?s experience
with such dissident religious movements as the Albigenses and Cathari, who
believed in a radical dualism of good and evil, led to the belief that certain
people had allied themselves with Satan. As a result of confrontations with
such heresy, the Inquisition was established by a series of papal decrees
between 1227 and 1235. Pope Innocent IV authorized the use of torture in
1252, and Pope Alexander IV gave the Inquisition authority over all cases of
sorcery involving heresy, although local courts carried out most actual
prosecution of witches. At the same time, other developments created a
climate in which alleged witches were stigmatized as representatives of evil.
Since the middle of the 11th century, the theological and philosophical work
of scholasticism had been refining the Christian concepts of Satan and evil.
Theologians, influenced by Aristotelian rationalism, increasingly denied that
“natural” miracles could take place and therefore alleged that anything
supernatural and not of God must be due to commerce with Satan or his
minions (see Aristotle). Later, the Reformation, the rise of science, and the
emerging modern world?all challenges to traditional religion?created deep
anxieties in the orthodox population. At the dawn of the Renaissance (15th
century to 16th century) some of these developments began to coalesce into
the “witch craze” that possessed Europe from about 1450 to 1700. During
this period, thousands of people, mostly innocent women, were executed on
the basis of “proofs” or “confessions” of diabolical witchcraft?that is, of
sorcery practiced through allegiance to Satan?obtained by means of cruel
tortures. A major impetus for the hysteria was the papal bull Summis
Desiderantes issued by Pope Innocent VIII in 1484. It was included as a
preface in the book Malleus Maleficarum (The Hammer of Witches),
published by two Dominican inquisitors in 1486. This work, characterized by
a distinct anti-feminine tenor, vividly describes the satanic and sexual
abominations of witches. The book was translated into many languages and
went through many editions in both Catholic and Protestant countries,
outselling all other books except the Bible. In the years of the witch-hunting
mania, people were encouraged to inform against one another. Professional
witch finders identified and tested suspects for evidence of witchcraft and
were paid a fee for each conviction. The most common test was pricking: All
witches were supposed to have somewhere on their bodies a mark, made by
the Devil, that was insensitive to pain; if such a spot was found, it was
regarded as proof of witchcraft. Other proofs included additional breasts
(supposedly used to suckle familiars), the inability to weep, and failure in the
water test. In which, a woman was thrown into a body of water; if she sank,
she was considered innocent, but if she stayed afloat, she was found guilty.
This test, along with the others, was obviously dumb. For if the suspected
was innocent, she was dead, and if she was a witch, she would be killed.
And for the body mark test, to find this so called “spot” meant the suspect
had to be poked and pricked all over her body till a spot that didn?t hurt was
found. This obviously caused the suspect a great deal of pain, and if the spot
was found the victim still would have gone through torture to find it. The
persecution of witches declined about 1700, banished by the Age of
Enlightenment, which subjected such beliefs to a skeptical eye. One of the
last outbreaks of witch-hunting took place in colonial Massachusetts in 1692,
when belief in diabolical witchcraft was already declining in Europe. Twenty
people were executed in the wake of the Salem witch trials, which took place
after a group of young girls became hysterical while playing at magic and it
was proposed that they were bewitched. Although many lost their lives, none
of the people accused were actually witches. They were accused because the
girls said that they were the ones causing their state of bewitchment. And
although it seemed like the girls were indeed bewitched, it was all a hoax,
which was discovered later, unfortunately, after the trials and the deaths of
about 20 innocent people. The girls started to believe their bewitchment all
because of a slave girl named Tituba. She took care of the household of
Reverend Samuel Parris and his family. She reportedly entertained Parris?s
daughter and niece with forbidden stories of witchcraft and storytelling from
her native land. Later the girls called her a witch, and her vivid confession
sparked the witch hunting hysteria. The two girls would occasionally act
bewitched or hysterical and blame it on people of the town. But they were
careful in their choosing; usually the people accused were very eccentric or
weird people, secluded or not very social. This made them the perfect witch
types: quiet, weird, eccentric, secluded, and non-social. Ann Putnam, a close
friend of the “afflicted girls” later resulted to be bewitched as well, and soon
became the star witness, and main victim. She testified against more “witches”
then any one else on the witness stand. But after it was all found to be a hoax,
she was followed by guilt and sorrow. She later repented her role in the
witch-hunt hysteria. Although most of it was just a hoax, and good acting, it is
possible that one of the “affected” girls died from her affliction. Abigail
Williams, Samuel Parris?s 11-year old niece, is thought to have died from her
affliction soon after the witch-hunt had subsided. Mary Warren, a 20-year
old servant for John and Elizabeth Procter, soon joined the girls in testifying
against the “witches”. But soon had second thoughts after an accusation
against her employers. She testified on there behalf only to become a suspect
herself. Terrified, Warren rejoined the accusers and continued accusing
people of being witches. But although it was usually outcasts that were
persecuted, the accusation and hanging of Martha Cory was a different type.
Martha belonged to the churchgoing elite, she hardly ever missed a day of
church, and was one of the few entitled to take communion. She was a
critical person in the witch-hunt, it showed the public that not only the
outcasts and eccentric were accused, but also the churchgoing and social. In
all this dilemma and accusations, only one suspect was found non-guilty.
Rebecca Nurse was accused as well, but found not guilty in the trial. Over 40
friends and neighbors testified in her favor, telling of her good faith and
character. But the verdict from the jury caused such an outcry of fear, that the
jury was asked to re-consider, and she was then found guilty and hung. Mary
Esty, Rebecca Nurses sister was also accused of being a witch, but she
argued her case so well and in such a convincing manner, that the girls
relented and she was found not guilty. She was released, a first in the
witch-trials, but before long she was arrested once again on the claim that the
girls had been haunted by her ghost. She was convicted and hung on
September 22, 1692. Although all of the “witches” were hung, a certain man
named Giles Cory was killed in a traditional English manner. He was pressed,
pressing was where they would place heavy stones on a person till they died.
Cory died two days later, crushed. 25 lives were taken during these Salem
trials. 19 “witches” were hung at Gallows hill. One was tortured to death by
pressing. And five others died in prison, including an infant. The Salem witch
trials were mainly caused by these two girls imagination. But, as already
stated in this report, other events led up to the dilemma and hysteria found in
the Salem witch trials.
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