impact of fraudulent cases Flashcards

1
Q

What year was the Boy of Burton fraudulent case?

A

1597

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2
Q

How much impact did the Boy of Burton case have on religion?

A

Huge impact > involvement of Archbishop of Canterbury

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3
Q

What evidence is there of the Church intervening as a result of the Boy of Burton case?

A

1604 - Forbidding the practice of exorcisms without a license
> Had little impact as only raised legal severity > perhaps the Church intervened for reputable reasons?

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4
Q

What was largely questioned as a result of the Boy of Burton case?

A

Exorcisms > well known exorcist John Darrell’s reputation damaged due to exposed fraudulence
> sparked theological debate: were exorcisms reliable at suspending the Devil?

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5
Q

What sparked attention surrounding local communities beliefs due to the exposure of the Boy of Burton case?

A

Gossip played dominate role in spreading witchcraft belief

> Exposure of Thomas Darling’s lie supports this, perhaps the child was influenced by local gossip?

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6
Q

Was witchcraft belief fully suspended as a result of the Boy of Burton case?

A

No > pamphlet war was dedicated to exorcisms rather than witchcraft belief > opposition to witchcraft largely remained among local communities

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7
Q

What year was the Pendle Swindle case?

A

1634

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8
Q

Why did the Pendle Swindle gain mass attention during the 1630s?

A

Involvement of Privy Council & King Charles

> Huge impact, perhaps resonated with the King’s personal beliefs surrounding witchcraft?

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9
Q

What is the link between the reduced witchcraft prosecutions and the involvement of the Elite/Learned Elite in the 1630s?

A

Foundation for actionable change > highlights better approach towards prosecutions using rational thinking

> Perhaps scepticism of witnesses increased? (significant impact)

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10
Q

Why did belief in witchcraft not dramatically change as a result of the Pendle Swindle?

A

Despite overriding gossip/century old belief with evidence it played a part in the beginning of the East Anglia Witch Hunt 11 years later
> A significant duality therefore is of great impact

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11
Q

What impact did John Webster have on local communities in 1677?

A

Birthed complications > majoritively opinion based case
> Rural communities had little access to literacy
> Little influence over people’s beliefs > Robinson’s credulity was questioned

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12
Q

What year was the Demon Drummer of Tedworth case?

A

1662

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13
Q

How significant was the Demon Drummer of Tedworth case?

A

Very > revisited throughout 17th century > scepticism based argument
> Not opinion based case due to publication

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14
Q

How did the Demon Drummer of Tedworth provoke debate?

A

Reality of supernatural forces were uncommon > gossip influence overrode evidence (large impact)
> Fueled nobleman’s suspicions also

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15
Q

Why is the Demon Drummer case excluded from other fraudulent cases during Stuart Britain?

A

Had smaller impact on declining belief in witchcraft > supernatural phenomena entirely blamed

> Doesn’t integrate Church teachings of the Devil

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16
Q

What impact did the Demon Drummer case have long term?

A

> Took more empirical approach to direct change

> Witchcraft accusations based on people not inanimate objects (stereotypes of ‘witches’ emerging in the future)

17
Q

What year was the Jane Wenham case?

A

1712

18
Q

Why was the Jane Wenham case particularly significant?

A

Popular belief clashed with educated belief
> Posed great impact of division > influential powers vs law abiding attributes concluded sceptic case
> Rational improvements on supernatural phenomena

19
Q

How did the rational improvements of the Jane Wenham trial contribute to popular beliefs?

A

Educate elites (or members of Intelligentsia) challenged century old folktales > provides changing attitudes parallel to declining witchcraft trials during 1660s

20
Q

Why could it be argued witchcraft trials declined as a result of the Jane Wenham case?

A

Widespread orthodoxy surrounding research based evidence > little accusation/theory
> Writes published scripts supporting the rational belief

21
Q

Why could supporting publications of the Jane Wenham case also limit the impact they had?

A

Only those ready to accept scientific revolution and intellectual thinking would appreciate the significance of the publications supporting and proving the significance of rational belief