The Salem Witch Trials

17
The Salem Witch Trials An Introduction to Hysteria

description

The Salem Witch Trials. An Introduction to Hysteria. The Background. In 1689, Reverend Samuel Parris became village minister in Salem Village (now Danvers, Massachusetts). More Background. He was unpopular from the start. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Salem Witch Trials

Page 1: The Salem Witch Trials

The Salem Witch Trials

An Introduction to Hysteria

Page 2: The Salem Witch Trials

The Background• In 1689, Reverend Samuel Parris

became village minister in Salem Village (now Danvers, Massachusetts)

Page 3: The Salem Witch Trials

More Background

• He was unpopular from the start.

• By early 1692, his family was nearly starving -- the Village had cut him off financially.

Page 4: The Salem Witch Trials

The Evil Hand• January, 1692: Parris’s daughter Betty (age 9)

and niece Abigail (age 12) began acting strangely.

• They had fits, blasphemed (cursed God) heavily, etc.

• Prayers could not stop their behavior.

• The Village doctor said they were suffering “The Evil Hand.”

Page 5: The Salem Witch Trials

The First Cry of “Witch”

• A neighbor had Parris’s slave make a witch cake -- made from the girls’ urine & fed to the family dog. This cake, local magic lore said, would cause the girls to confess the names of the witches.

Page 6: The Salem Witch Trials

“Witch!”

• They identify: Sarah Good (a homeless woman), Tituba (Parris’s slave), and Sarah Osburn (a socially unpopular woman)

• What do these women have in common?

Page 7: The Salem Witch Trials

Clarification of Terms

• To the Puritans, the word witch had a very specific meaning: one who associated with or is in a league with Satan.

Page 8: The Salem Witch Trials

Tituba’s Confession

• The slave, Tituba, confessed that Parris had beaten her and made her confess.

• She said that she did consort with the devil, who appeared to her “sometimes like a hog and sometimes like a great dog.”

Page 9: The Salem Witch Trials

The Accusations Continue• Accusations of witchcraft spread like

wildfire.

• People began saying that they, too, had been harmed or afflicted by witches.

• Many of the accused were social problematic -- people who went against the normal social order.

Page 10: The Salem Witch Trials

A New Turn

• Over the spring of 1692, many highly respected women of Salem Village began to be accused.

Page 11: The Salem Witch Trials

The Witch Court

• In May 1692, the Governor of Massachusetts established a special witchcraft Court.

• This court began to hear witchcraft cases.

Page 12: The Salem Witch Trials
Page 13: The Salem Witch Trials

“Evidence”

• Various forms of evidence were accepted in the court:– confessions & accusations

– “witchmarks”

– reactions of those afflicted to the accused

– spectral evidence -- the Devil could take the form of an innocent person

Page 14: The Salem Witch Trials

The Examination of a Witch

Page 15: The Salem Witch Trials

Bridget Bishop

• Bridget Bishop is convicted of witchcraft in early June.

• On June 10, 1692, Bishop was hanged to death for witchcraft.

Page 16: The Salem Witch Trials

Totals

• By the end of the trials, 19 people were hanged for witchcraft.

• At least 5 more died of poor conditions in prison.

• One man was tortured to death for refusing to stand trial. (He was pressed with stones until dead.)

Page 17: The Salem Witch Trials

In summary

• In the words of Martha Carrier, one of the accused:– “It is a shameful thing that you should mind

these folks that are out of their wits.”

• In what ways were the people of Salem Village “out of their wits?”