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Summary Edexcel A Level History witch craze section 3.7

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summary of the final section for witch craze- salem. summaries for sub sections and wider picture provided. good for those aiming to get grades C and above

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Analytical Cornell Notes: The Salem
Witch-Hunt (1692–1693)
1. Foundations of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
The Massachusetts Bay Colony, established in 1620, was anchored in the rigid ideological
vision of a "godly state." Unlike the "High Church" establishment in Virginia (1607), the
Puritan settlers were defined by their flight from religious persecution and a subsequent
refusal to tolerate denominational dissent. Within this closed sociopolitical framework,
religious and civil duties were fused, creating an environment where any deviation from
Puritan strictures was viewed as a theological threat. This foundational lack of tolerance
established a high-pressure atmosphere where the "threat of the Devil" was not a metaphor,
but a constant, preached reality used to maintain communal order.



Foundations of the Massachusetts Bay Colony



Key Terms:. Detailed Information:. Puritanism served as the dominant faith,
Puritanism. British mandating church taxes and restricting voting rights exclusively
Colonial Settlements. to church members; non-Puritans faced banishment.. Virginia
Pre-1692 Executions (1607): Established as a "High Church" colony with different
sociopolitical priorities.. Massachusetts (1620): A stronghold for
those fleeing persecution, focused on strict religious adherence
and preaching against witchcraft.. Witchcraft was a recognized
crime long before Salem; the first official execution was Alice
Young in 1647.. Twenty-seven individuals were hanged for
witchcraft in the colony prior to the 1692 outbreak.



Summary:.The colony’s extreme religious isolation and lack of
diversity created a psychological pressure cooker. By framing
the community as a "godly state" under constant spiritual siege,
the leadership fostered a heightened societal fear that viewed
misfortune or deviance through the lens of demonic influence.



This rigid religious foundation was soon destabilized by shifting political powers in England,
which fractured the colony’s sense of autonomy.


2. Political Instability and the 1688 Revolution

, The 1688 Glorious Revolution in England fundamentally altered colonial governance,
creating a vacuum of authority that left the population susceptible to internal panic. The
removal of the Catholic King James II in favor of the Protestant William of Orange led to the
1689 rebellion in Boston against the unpopular Governor Andros. Puritans feared they were
being used in a "popish plot" under Andros's high-church tendencies. The subsequent delay
in securing a new charter created a state of "weakened authority" where traditional social
controls were suspended, leaving the community feeling defenseless against both spiritual
and secular threats.



Political Instability and the 1688 Revolution



Key Terms:. The Detailed Information:. Governor Andros: Appointed to the
New Charter of Dominion of New England; deeply unpopular for restricting town
1691. Governor meetings and declaring Puritan landownership titles void.. Andros
Andros. King was arrested by rebels led by Increase and Cotton Mather in April
William 1689 after news of the revolution reached Massachusetts.. New
Charter (1691): Imposed by King William; it fundamentally shifted
power by making voting eligibility based on property ownership rather
than religious denomination.. The Charter allowed the Crown to
appoint officials and block local laws, effectively ending exclusive
Puritan rule.. Puritans felt they had achieved little change through
their rebellion, leading to widespread social unsettledness.



Summary:.The psychological impact of this political chaos led
Puritans to believe the "Devil was at work." The failure to restore
their exclusive religious authority through the 1691 Charter was
perceived as a spiritual defeat, manifesting as a collective fear that
their political rebellion had been thwarted by demonic interference.



These internal political anxieties were mirrored and magnified by the external physical
threats looming on the colony's volatile frontier.


3. The Frontier Menace: Indian Threats and Paranoia
The late 17th century was defined by brutal frontier warfare that inflicted a severe
psychological toll on Salem’s residents. In the Puritan worldview, Native Americans were
categorized as "agents of the Devil" sent by Satan to dismantle the godly community. This
spiritualization of conflict meant that military setbacks were viewed as signs of God’s
displeasure or the Devil’s triumph. The constant threat of slaughter and the influx of
traumatized refugees into Salem created a state of hyper-vigilance that easily translated into
spiritual paranoia.

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Uploaded on
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