My niece teaches history. She explained most witches were women who held land independently through inheritance (widow, daughter, etc.) Accusing them of witchcraft made the land available usually for the accuser to take possession.
2006-11-11 09:34:06
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answer #1
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answered by whozethere 5
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incorrect to blame the Christians? i do no longer think of so. The sociological motives have been religious. They have been burned as witches! the place did those people even get the theory that witches have been some thing that existed if no longer from faith? So the guy theory there have been witches burned in Salem, So what? Are you going to declare that the witch hunts throughout the time of the international have under no circumstances led to those convicted of witchcraft being burned alive? i think of no longer. Are you ignorant of the reality that witches are being burned alive via the stable Christians in Nigeria as we talk? As for Christians accusing Christians, of direction they do. The Catholic church obtained anybody that replaced into rich and ought to no longer lf An rich widow who had her husbands land could discover herself right now accused so the Church ought to snatch all of the land and wealth. of direction it replaced into political. while has faith no longer been political. The shape states that the state can no longer intervene with faith, it says no longer something in any respect approximately faith no longer interfering with the state. Your arguments are at ultimate susceptible and intensely nit-picky.
2016-12-14 05:31:51
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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There were several possible causes. One, 2 little girls looking for attention and casting blame on people they did not like. 2 It is possible that a hallucinogen from a fungus on wheat was the cause of some of it. 3 many were accused simply because of a grudge. And 4, anytime a man or woman was convicted of witchcraft the local politicians would claim their property. However, there is a good possibility that Bridget Bishop and Sarah Good were witches.but the others were pillars of the local church until hysterical children accused them.
2006-11-11 10:10:31
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answer #3
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answered by Enchanted Gypsy 6
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Fear, mostly. Religious dogma and intolerance added to a fear of the native american traditions around them. Plus a sudden series of agricultural misfortunes. Mix it together with a healthy dose of superstition and unpopulr people and presto...massacre city.
2006-11-11 09:40:05
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answer #4
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answered by Scott M 7
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the witches who were giving the trials, to punish the alleged other covens of witches, not of their own witch way.
you know: just like what the sunni and sheite muslem witches are doing to each other. or the hamas witches are doing to the jewish witches and vice versa, in their own preferred version of witch trials.
2006-11-11 09:34:07
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answer #5
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answered by yehoshooa adam 3
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Ignorance.
2006-11-11 09:28:35
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answer #6
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answered by Fish <>< 7
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IT was a desire for revenge on the part of some teenage girls backed-up by Christian intolerance and superstition
2006-11-11 09:36:03
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answer #7
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answered by Dr. Brooke 6
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Ignorance and the desire to have somone to blame for one's own misfortunes.
2006-11-11 09:31:03
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answer #8
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answered by Magic One 6
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Fear and hatred. They've always been the driving forces in Christianity.
2006-11-11 09:29:03
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answer #9
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answered by RELIGION 3
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As I remember it was two jealous, and vindictive little girls.
2006-11-11 09:35:53
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answer #10
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answered by Minister 4
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