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OCR A Level History AY312/01 Popular Culture and the Witchcraze of the 16th and17th Centuries MERGED QUESTION PAPER AND MARK SCHEME FOR MAY 2024

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OCR A Level History AY312/01 Popular Culture and the Witchcraze of the 16th and17th Centuries MERGED QUESTION PAPER AND MARK SCHEME FOR MAY 2024

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Thursday 23 May 2024 – Morning
A Level History A
Y312/01 Popular Culture and the Witchcraze of the 16th and
17th Centuries
Time allowed: 2 hours 30 minutes




Turn over

, 2

SECTION A


Read the two passages and answer Question 1.


1 Evaluate the interpretations in both of the two passages.

Explain which you think is more convincing as an explanation of the reasons for the Salem witch
trials. [30]


Passage A

Why did this one episode of witchcraft trials in Salem attain such massive proportions? For example,
in the sheer quantity of persons involved. The early 1690s seem to have been a time of extreme
anxiety in New England. The difficulties experienced during the preceding fifteen years had added up
to an almost intolerable sum. The wars were more devastating, the epidemic illnesses more prevalent
and the constitutional changes more unsettling than in any earlier period of the region’s history. It was
not hard to see in all this a general movement of God’s will against New England.

There were also powerful undercurrents of social change. The growth of commerce, the signs of a
more cosmopolitan spirit and the increasing strength of a merchant class: these were key elements in
a process of transformation.

So it was that the history of Salem in the closing decades of the seventeenth century expressed a
deep clash of interests. Both civil and religious experience were infected by faction and the witchcraft
trials of the 1690s were simply the climax in a long drama of local disagreement. Almost without
exception it was the Villagers who played the roles of ‘accuser’ and/or ‘victim’ and the Townspeople
who were cast as ‘witches’.

John P. Demos, Entertaining Satan: Witchcraft and the Culture of Early New England,
published in 1982.


Passage B

Social and economic tensions within Salem Village resulted in the witch hunt of 1692. There was a
deep rift in Salem Village between those who supported the ministry of Samuel Parris as well as the
witch hunt, and those who objected to or withheld support from Parris and the pursuit of witches.
Salem Village’s factional strains were rooted in religious tensions.

There was a sharp division between church members, strongly associated with their minister, Samuel
Parris, and non-church members, who dominated the anti-Parris committees of 1691–1693 and
signed the petition requesting Parris be removed from his position.

Although Salem Village’s turmoil over its church might not account for events elsewhere in the region,
Salem Village’s long standing religious tensions seem likely to have contributed to the initial afflictions
in Parris’ own household and to the conclusion they were caused by agents of the Devil. Once
evidence came to light that the Devil’s agency was not limited to Parris’ household or to Salem, but
was designed to destroy the whole Puritan community, some religious and secular leaders became
determined to root out the Devil’s servants, and the witch hunt became widespread.

Richard B Latner, The Salem Witchcraft Site, published after 2009.



© OCR 2024 Y312/01 Jun24

, 3

SECTION B

Answer any two questions.


2* ‘Economic causes were always more important than religious ones in the growth in persecution
of witches in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.’

How far do you agree? [25]


3* To what extent did the geography of the witchcraze remain the same in the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries? [25]


4* ‘Torture was the most frequent response of the authorities to witchcraft in the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries.’

How far do you agree? [25]




END OF QUESTION PAPER
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