The Salem Witch Trials

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The Salem witchcraft trials began in the year of 1692. The trials caused hysteria in Salem Village. There were twenty people accused of witchcraft and executed. Over one hundred people were thought to be guilty and were placed in jail. However, “The Salem witch-hunt was remarkable not for the numbers hanged and imprisoned but for happening when it did” (Hill 1). The trials began over forty years after the initial European witch-frenzy (Hill 1). Superstition was being challenged by scientists at the time. Why then, would yet another witch-hunt begin? There has been much debate over why the witch-hunt started. Speculations have been made of hostility or psychological disorders being the main cause of the witch hunt. The girls may have been under the influence of Tituba, a Caribbean slave. Ergot poisoning is another theory that was questioned. Whether it was ergotism, the influence of Tituba or hostility that caused the witch-hunt, the one thing that is certain is that the Salem witch trials were hysterical.
Ergot poisoning was one theory of what caused the girls of Salem village to behave as they did. It was speculated that the girls may have contracted ergotism through eating the rye bread that was made from rye on the Putnam farm (Woolf, par.17). Fungus would grow on rye flowers and replace the grain that grew there with a bundle of mycelia that could contain ergots (Woolf, par.9). Different kinds of ergotism could be contracted. The type of ergotism that was believed to have affected the young girls in Salem was convulsive ergotism. When someone or something contracts convulsive ergotism, they experience consistent vertigo, headaches, painful muscular contractions, mania, delirium, and visual and auditory hallucinations (Woolf, ...

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...y be true, or perhaps the real reason is still to be found. Only time will tell.

Works Cited
Hansen, Chadwick. "Andover Witchcraft and the Causes of the Salem Witchcraft Trials." The
Occult in America: New Historical Perspectives. Ed. Howard Kerr and Charles L. Crow. University of Illinois Press, 1983. 38-57. Rpt. in Literature Criticism from 1400 to 1800. Ed. Jelena O. Krstovic. Vol. 38. Detroit: Gale Research, 1998. Literature Resource Center. Web. 27 Nov. 2013
Hill, Frances. The Salem Witch Trials Reader. [Cambridge, Mass.]: Da Capo, 2000. Print.
Rosenthal, Bernard. "Tituba." OAH Magazine of History July 2003: 48-50. MasterFILE Premier. Web. 27 Nov. 2013.
Woolf, Alan. "Witchcraft or Mycotoxin? The Salem Witch Trials." Journal of Toxicology: Clinical Toxicology 38.4 (2000): 457. Health and Wellness Resource Center. Gale Cengage Learning. Web. 27 Nov. 2013.

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