Changes between Initial Version and Version 1 of Books/The_Salem_Witch_Trials

Show
Ignore:
Timestamp:
23/06/08 00:08:59 (2 years ago)
Author:
darkbeholder
Comment:

--

Legend:

Unmodified
Added
Removed
Modified
  • Books/The_Salem_Witch_Trials

    v1 v1  
     1'''Navigation''': WikiStart | [wiki:Library HSOM Library] | [http://www.hsom.net/forum HSOM Index]  
     2= The Salem Witch Trials = 
     3The Salem Witch Trials were a part of American History, as they were moslty the only prosececution of witches and wizards. The trials occured during the time periods of 1688 through 1702 were the Genral Court Declares it unlawful. 
     4 
     5For witches and wizards of the time, it was dangerous as if anyone caught you, you would have been publicly tortured until you admit that you were a witch/wizard, and then you would be publicly exicuted. 
     6 
     7But first lets start from the beginning, Salem was first setteled in 1629 by the British Empire in Massachusettes, one of there Colonies. Then in 1641, Britian declares that witchcraft is a capital crime and a punishment by death. And then a couple years later in 1684, Britian declares that the colonies may not self-govern. Then four years later were the first strange happening with witchcraft begun. In 1688, following an argument with laundress Goody Glover, Martha Goodwin, 13, begins exhibiting bizarre behavior. Days later her younger brother and two sisters exhibit similar behavior. Glover is arrested and tried for bewitching the Goodwin children. Reverend Cotton Marther meets twice with Glover following her arrest in an attempt to persuade her to repent her witchcraft. Glover is hanged. Marther takes Martha Goodwin into his house. Her bizarre behavior continues and worsens. 
     8 
     9Then soon after the Goodwin incident, there started to be more reports of witchcraft being used, as in 1692, 11 year old Abigail Williams and 9 year old Elizabeth Parris begin bahaving much as the Goodwin children acted four years earlier. Soon Ann Putnam Jr. and other Salem girls begin acting similarly. 
     10 
     11In Mid Febrary, 1692, Doctor Griggs who attends the "afflicted" girls, suggest that witchcraft maybe the cause of their strange behavior and so dose a long period of time of terror for witches and wizards alike and inicent muggles who have been thought to be one of us. . 
     12 
     13February 25,1692, Tituba, at the request of neighbor Mary Sibley, bakes a "witch cake" and feeds it to a dog. According to an English folk remedy, feeding a dog this kind of cake, which contained the urine of the afflicted, would counteract the spell out of Elizabeth and Abigail. The reason the cake is fed to a dog is because the dog is believed a "familiar" of the Devil. . 
     14 
     15Then later on in the month, being pressured by ministers and townspeople to say who caused her odd behavior, Elizabeth identifies Tituba. The other girls later accused Sara Good and Sarah Osborne of witchcraft. Then on February 29,1692 arrest warrants were issued for tituba, Sarah Good, and Sarah Osborne. They latered died in prison. . 
     16 
     17These kinds of things have gone about for along time and they became so up-tight about it they have "found" ways to figure out if you were a witch or a wizard. . 
     18 
     19If you had any marks of any kind like a birth mark or even a mole on a part of your body, they claimed it to be unnatural and that you were a witch or wizard. Or just by tortureing them, by stiping them from head to foot and to see if they're were any unusual marks, or by tieing their hands and feet together and then throwing them into a river, which if they floted they said that the river God made rejected them and were to be considered evil, and if the sunk which most of them did, they drowned and were not considered evil as God has accepted them into the river, but if you did survive that you would have been hung or burned alive in a public square. There are many other ways to but most of them might be to grusem to mention. . 
     20 
     21== THE DEAD == 
     22 
     23'''Nineteen accused witches were hanged on Gallow Hill''' 
     24 
     25Bridget Bishop 
     26 
     27George Burroughs 
     28 
     29Martha Carrier 
     30 
     31Martha Corey 
     32 
     33Mary Easty 
     34 
     35Sarah Good 
     36 
     37Elizabeth Howe 
     38 
     39George Jacobs Sr.  
     40 
     41Susannah Martin 
     42 
     43Rebecca Nurse 
     44 
     45Alice Parker 
     46 
     47Mary Parker 
     48 
     49John Proctor 
     50 
     51Ann Pudeator 
     52 
     53Wilmott Redd 
     54 
     55Margaret Scott 
     56 
     57Samuel Wardwell 
     58 
     59Sara Wildes 
     60 
     61John Willard 
     62 
     63'''One accused witch or wizard was pressed to death when he or she failed to plea guilty or not guilty''' 
     64 
     65Giles Corey 
     66 
     67'''Other accused witches died in prison''' 
     68 
     69Sarah Osborn 
     70 
     71Roger Toothaker 
     72 
     73Lyndia Dustin 
     74 
     75Ann Foster 
     76 
     77''As many as thirteen others may have died in prison'' 
     78 
     79'''Navigation''': WikiStart | [wiki:Library HSOM Library] | [http://www.hsom.net/forum HSOM Index]