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Witch Hysteria Timeline

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Title: Witch Hysteria Timeline


1
Witch Hysteria Timeline
  • By Justin Barkhouse

December 14, 2007 English 12, cycle green Mr.
Sheppard
2
Witches Arent so Bad
  • Before the 15th century, witchcraft was against
    the law, but this law was seldom enforced.
    Witchcraft was not seen as the horrible act of
    evil that it came to be in the later centuries.
    Witchcraft was associated with strange rituals,
    magic charms, love potions, demons, and spirits.
    However the lenient laws on witchcraft started to
    change in the 15th century.

3
15th Century It Begins
  • The beginning of the 15th century brought about a
    change in how witchcraft was looked at. The
    catholic church deemed witchcraft to be a
    dangerous heresy. People who practiced witchcraft
    were considered to be servants of the devil, who
    vowed to destroy the church and bring evil onto
    gods people. The idea that most witches were
    women formed in this era.

4
Malleus Maleficarum
  • 1486 Two scholarly inquisitors, Kramer and
    Sprenger, published a volume which became the
    handbook for witch hunters in many countries.
    The book, titled Malleus Maleficarum (The Hammer
    of the Witches) explained what witchcraft was,
    where witchcraft had spread, and how to discover
    and convict witches.

Cover of the 7th edition
5
England Joins the Hunt
  • Geographically and psychologically separated from
    the European mainland, it wasnt until
    mid-sixteenth century that England finally made
    witchcraft a crime punishable by death and joined
    the witch hysteria.
  • 1563 During the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, a
    statute against the practice of witchcraft was
    passed.
  • 1566 The famous Chelmsford Trials, where three
    women are tried and hanged for bewitching village
    children. These trials set the pattern for other
    English trials and brought witchcraft fully to
    England.

6
How to Spot a Witch in the 15th Century
  • Can the suspected person fly?
  • Have you seen the person cast spells, bewitch
    people, or work magic?
  • Have you seen the person turn into an animal
  • Has the person rejected god? (ex not going to
    church, not praying, praising the devil)
  • Have you been attack by their spirit?
  • Has the person ever said sabbat instead of
    Sabbath?

If you answered yes to any of these questions,
you may have a witch on your hands. Please
contact your church immediately.
7
King James the 1st
  • 1597 King James the 1st, a believer of
    witchcraft, imposed stiffer penalties for witch
    offenses. He published a book, Demonology, which
    supported the belief and punishments of
    witchcraft. This book made the subject of
    witchcraft more accepted in English society.

King James the 1st
8
England and the Witchfinder General
  • 1645 In the midst of civil strife, witch
    persecution reached its height in England.
    Matthew Hopkins, nicknamed the Witchfinder
    General, lead a campaigned through various
    English countries discovering witches. He
    accomplished this usually through trickery and
    torture. Hopkins is responsible for the deaths of
    200 people.

Matthew Hopkins
9
Transplanted Fears
  • 1677 John Websters volume, The Displaying of
    Supposed Witchcraft, and later in the 1680s,
    Joseph Glanvills Saducismus Triumphatus, helped
    to spread the support of witchcraft. Typical
    English men and women now believed in the
    existence of witchcraft. These beliefs and fears
    were brought over seas to the New World, which
    was North America. Also the use of spectral
    evidence was brought with them, which is key at
    the events of Salem Village.

10
Salem Village The Beginning
  • 1630s A Great Migration of English Puritans
    come to New England, bringing with them their
    beliefs and fears of witchcraft.
  • 1637 Salem Village is settled. For many years
    Salem Village is know for its land disputes and
    church controversies.
  • 1689 Samuel Parris becomes the minister of
    Salem village. Things in the village settle down,
    or so it seems.

11
Salem Village The Hysteria Begins
  • 1691 Abigail Williams, Parriss eleven-year-old
    niece, and Betty Parris, his nine-year-old
    daughter, start to exhibit wild and unusual
    behavior. The situations gets worse when more
    girls start to exhibit the same behavior. The
    village doctor, William Griggs, concludes that
    the evil hand is upon the children. The witch
    hysteria begins. After much continuous insistence
    from their elders, the suffering girls name three
    women, who were supposedly tormenting them with
    their invisible specters.

12
Salem Thou Shalt Not Suffer a Witch to Live
  • 1692 - Judges Danforth, Hawthorn, and Cheever
    preside over the trials of the accused witches.
    By accepting the use of spectral evidence, most
    of the accused are found guilty.
  • May 1692 Over one hundred and fifty people
    accused of witchcraft are in jail.
  • July 19th 5 convicted witches are hanged
  • August 19th 5 more witches are hanged
  • September 22 8 witches are sent to the hangman

13
Andover Takes a Hit
  • Spring 1692 Ann Putnam and Mary Walcott, two of
    the most believable girls of Salem are sent to
    the town of Andover to see if witches are
    present. They discover over forty witches. This
    sends the town into the worst crisis it has ever
    known.

A Witch trial
14
Salem - Spectral Evidence Gets the Boot
  • September 19, 1692 After the 19 witches are
    killed, the trials are unexpectedly suspended.
    Over 150 people are still in jail awaiting
    trials.
  • January 3, 1693 The trials began again, but the
    use of spectral evidence is no longer valid. That
    being the main evidence against accused witches,
    most were determined to be not guilty.
  • May, 1693 The governor brings an end to the
    witch situation by proclaiming a general jail
    delivery of pardon. All accused Witches were
    free to go after paying their jail fees. The
    Witch hysteria is over.

15
Really, That Many
  • Here are some dates and how many people were
    killed for supposed witchcraft.
  • Geneva, Switzerland 1515 500 people executed
  • England and Scotland, 1500-1600 200 people a
    year are killed
  • Germany, late 15th, early 16th centuries
    thousands are burned as witches
  • Salem Village, 1692 19 witches are killed

16
Witch Burnings
Of the many ways that witches were executed, the
burnings in Germany were some of the most
gruesome
17
The Aftermath
  • 1695 Thomas Maule, a defendant in the Salem
    witch trials, publishes the book Truth Set
    Forth. The book condemns the Salem trials and
    attacks the those responsible for the trials. He
    is charged with slander and blasphemy against
    the churches and government of this province.
    Not guilty is his verdict.
  • 1697 Reverend Parris, the person who many
    people thought to be responsible for the death
    and suffering during the Salem witch hysteria,
    leaves the Village, and never returns.
  • 1711 Some of the accused witches and their
    families finally receive legal apologies and
    compensation for the loss of property and
    distress. Though, for some, it will be 200 years
    after the events at Salem before their names will
    be cleared by a resolution passed by the
    Massachusetts Legislature.
  • 1752 Salem Village separates from Salem town,
    and its name is change to Danvers. This new name
    removes the stigma that its previous name had.

18
The End
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