Waubonsee Community College

The Salem witchcraft trials, a legal history, Peter Charles Hoffer

Label
The Salem witchcraft trials, a legal history, Peter Charles Hoffer
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 153-158) and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The Salem witchcraft trials
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
36892841
Responsibility statement
Peter Charles Hoffer
Series statement
Landmark law cases & American society
Sub title
a legal history
Summary
In late-seventeenth-century New England, the eternal battle between God and Satan moved into the courtroom. Between January 1692 and May 1693 in Salem, Massachusetts, neighbors turned against neighbors and children against parents with accusations of witchcraft, and nineteen people were hanged for having made pacts with the devilPeter Charles Hoffer tells the real story of how religious beliefs, superstitions, clan disputes, and Anglo-American law and custom created an epidemic of accusations that resulted in the investigation of nearly two hundred colonists and, for many, the ordeal of trial and incarceration. Along the way, he shows how many rights we take for granted today - such as rules of evidence and a defendant's right to legal counsel - did not apply in colonial times. A concise history written expressly for students and general readers, The Salem Witchcraft Trials sheds important light on early American law and tempers our horror of these infamous proceedings with sympathy for a people who gave in to panic in the face of a harsh and desolate existence
Table Of Contents
Newcomers on the road to Salem -- The village -- Witchcraft suspected -- The accusers -- The magistrates and the suspects -- The judges, the ministers, and the law -- The disreputable woman -- The good wife -- The scoffers -- The hard man -- The end of the trials -- Apologies
Genre
Content
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