What Is The Cause And Effect Of The Salem Witch Trials

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The Truth: The Salem Witch Trials began in Massachusetts around 1692 and lasted till 1693. People started to get accused of practicing witchcraft which was known as “Devil’s magic” to the point where it was thought that nearly 200 colonist might be in the practice. Many religious people, most of which stood by the Christian faith, assumed that the Devil himself could give people the power to hurt others way of life in exchange for their loyalty. Around the early months of 1692, Betty Parris, age 9, and her cousin Abigail Williams, age 11, the daughter and niece of Reverend Samuel Parris began to have “fits” to the point where they would throw things around the room, make strange and unique sounds, and shape themselves into bodily positions that weren't very comfortable. Another girl, Ann Putnam, age 11, was having similar occasions; all three girls symptoms were blamed and concluded on being supernatural or unknown by a local doctor. On February 29, magistrates Jonathan Corwin and John Hathorne demanded answers from the 3 girls. They blamed three women for causing their troubles: Tituba, a slave for the Parris' family, Sarah Good, penniless bum, and Sarah Osborne, a crippled woman. All three women were trialed in front of the Jonathan Corwin and John Hathorne and interrogated for several days at …show more content…

The movie goes into a individual perspective, showing a personal situation instead trying to have a wider coverage of these times during the Colonial Era. Film watchers will be able to expand their knowledge over Salem by watching the movie because it will show what are ancestors were like in the late 1600s and how we have gotten to where we are today. While the actual event happened in 1692 and the film came out in 1996, this plot and storyline can still be applied to modern times to where movie audiences can still relate and enjoy the

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