The Importance Of The Salem Witch Trials

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Do you want your life resting in the words of your worst enemy? Before the formation of the American legal system, accusations determined outcomes. In the late 1600’s the Puritans in New England were just starting to build civil resolutions to village disputes. A notable conflict was based on their strong belief in the devil and witchcraft creating an atmosphere of fear and suspicion. Instead of seeking justice of those accused of witchcraft, the inexperienced magistrates were led to presume guilt simply because of odd behavior. This exchange in the Salem Witchcraft Trials was an important period in history because it illustrated the dangers of superstitions and prejudiced accusations which resulted in the imprisonment and execution of innocent people. There are many important events that led up to the Salem Witch Trials. Way back in 1233, when witchcraft was not familiar to anybody, Pope Gregory formed the medieval interrogation to bring justice against the growing heresy (The Salem Witch Trials 8) to arrest, try, convict and execute heretics. Pope Gregory’s inquisition carried on to the point where he insisted on torturing the heretics during trial, which came to a stop in 1258 when Pope Alexander IV forced their inquisition to confine their investigations to just cases of heresy without torture. The Church then authorized the Inquisition to investigate Witchcraft, which lead to attempting to prove that witches are …show more content…

The Salem Witch Trials were a series of witchcraft cases brought before local magistrates to declare innocence or guilt. There were one-hundred-forty-one people imprisoned, nineteen people were executed and two more died from causes directly related to the investigations. The trials in Salem, Massachusetts accounted for one quarter of all the people executed for witchcraft in New England (Callis

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