Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Hadrians Building Projects Across The Empire History Essay

The reason I have decided to research and analyse sources concerning Hadrian’s building projects are that I believe they provide a good insight into understanding Hadrian himself and also his reign as emperor. Hadrian’s reign has further interest to me due to his lasting impact on architecture, and recent archaeological sites, such as Sagalassos in Turkey, have brought Hadrian into the forefront of ancient Roman study.

Marble bust of Hadrian during his reign

Hadrian’s appearance and the way he presents himself to both his subjects and for future rulers can teach us much about him and therefore his reign. The Greek style beard opposed to the more conservative appearance of cleanly shaven reflects Hadrian’s philhellenic attitude and reflects on his scholarly and somewhat radical approach to ruling. This is reflected in the changes on Roman society with the incorporation of conquered peoples fashions and ideology.

“He built something in almost every city”

Historia Augusta Hadrian 19.9

This source indicates a building boom that spread throughout the empire under the reign of Hadrian. This demonstrated both the affluence and the stability in his reign. To be able to partake in these building projects, Hadrian must have had the funds and resources to make them possible. There would also have to have been stability in the empire to allow the projects to be sustained without disturbances.

The exterior of the Pantheon

The Pantheon was a leading triumph of Roman architecture during Hadrian’s reign that symbolised the nature of the reign itself. It encapsulates both Hadrian’s ability of selecting the optimum architects to fulfil his wishes and the influence of the ancient Greek society on the Roman world. Hadrian greatly influenced the design of the building, such as the domed roof that Hadrian favoured, which would still be a phenomenal feat today. This demonstrated his direct influence on his empire but may also suggest that he was largely concerned with improving the aesthetics of his cities rather than the social issues. The influence of Greece on Rome is demonstrated by the Corinth capitals heading the columns; the structure of the roof also reflects the temple of Athena in Athens, as can be seen on the left. As can be seen, the rectangular shape and triangular roof, though it has fallen down on the temple of Athens, has directly influenced the Pantheon.

The inscription dedicated

By Agrippa and restored by Hadrian

As can be seen in the source, though built by Hadrian, the inscription dedicates the pantheon to Marcus Agrippa. During his reign Hadrian created several spectacular buildings but did not inscribe his name to any, except the temple of his father Trajan. This demonstrates that Hadrian was very modest in his outlook on life. It also indicates that his reign was a period of peace as the same consul was elected three times, suggesting stability in the senate.

The interior of the Pantheon seen from the entrance

To the rotunda

The Pantheon’s ceiling is the largest un-reinforced concrete dome in the world. This demonstrates the ingenuity and innovation of the Roman builders during Hadrian’s reign. The Pantheon was an iconic building during both the ancient and modern world. The scale at which Hadrian was able to build demonstrates again the skills of his workforce and the resources and funding that were available to him. The source also demonstrates the significance of religion in Hadrian’s empire. This temple dedicated to all gods reflected Hadrian’s devotion to the deities and the extent he would go to honour them. The word pantheon is formed of two Greek words, “pan” meaning all and “theos” meaning gods; the literal translation therefore is all gods. This demonstrates that Hadrian intended to honour all the gods of the Roman religion demonstrating his piety.

Marble Head from a colossal statue of Hadrian,

excavated at Sagalassos, south west Turkey.

This colossal statue of Hadrian demonstrated to his subjects in the province of Pisidia the full authority he had over them, as his statue would dominate their view. Found in what remains of the city Sagalassos, the statue represents Hadrian as an almost godlike figure and this would demonstrate to the people of this city the power he had as well as satisfy his own vanity. Statues of this sort are intended to glorify the emperor and this statue more than illustrates Hadrian’s control over a somewhat distant province. The source can therefore be shown to demonstrate the stability of the empire.

2.

Housteads Crags , Hadrian’s wall

Map of Northern England and southern Scotland with outline of Hadrian’s Wall.

Hadrian’s Wall was built in one of the furthest provinces in the Roman world Britain. It demonstrates military efficiency in being able to complete such a large project in a short time and was also a symbol of authority in the province. The extent of the size of the wall shows the building skills of the Roman builders and also the uncompromising attitude of the Romans by building across all kinds of terrain as seen in the source. The source also indicates limitations of Hadrian’s. Due to the risk of imperial overstretch the wall was formed he as further expansion into north Britain was not feasible.

Aerial view of Hadrian’s villa in the foothills

of the Tiburtine Mountains

As soon as he had been appointed emperor, Hadrian began planning what would eventually become his villa. By erecting this villa, Hadrian enhanced and belittled an established tradition of the Roman emperors. Though motivated by social convention, Hadrian extended his project to further glorify him and distinguish himself form other emperors. The result of his planning and almost twenty years of work was the largest villa in the Roman world. This building demonstrates Hadrian’s attempt to distinguish himself from previous emperors and well as demonstrate to his people the affluence and extravagance of the empire under his reign. His concept of rule was established by this project which incorporated both novel and traditional views and was seen by Hadrian as an architectural wonder where he could do as he pleased.

Statue of Antinous in the guise of the

Egyptian god Osiris

The Statue of Hadrian’s close friend and most likely his gay lover as an Egyptian deity found in the shrine to him after Antinous’ death demonstrates the incorporation of provincial fashions and deities into the Roman way of life. The openness of the shrine to Antinous and several other statues erected in his honour could suggest that the Romans displayed a liberal view on homosexuality during Hadrian’s reign compared to more recent history. However it may also demonstrate the absolute of the emperor that no-one would question his actions.

Word count = 1127



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Guilty Until Proven Innocent At Salem Witch Trials History Essay

In the 14th through 16th centuries and estimated 40 thousand people were executed for the crime of witchcraft and according to believers, it cam straight from the Bible in Exodus 22:18 which says Thou shall not suffer a witch to live. The Bible is the word of God and is infallible and believers had to live by it. Despite this strong belief in the Bible, early Christians were quite tolerant of Paganism and even witchcraft but as the Roman Catholic Church began to consolidate its power, heretics were looked at as the enemy.

By 1231, Pope Gregory the 9th instituted the inquisition which was designed to expose and punish heresy. That’s when the attitude towards witchcraft began to change and take on a more acceptable, violent attitude.

In 1484, Pope Innocent the 8th declared being a witch or a magician a crime and approved severe measures of punishment and ultimately death if a person was found to be either. All of the problems, from bad crops to bad weather, were blamed on witches and magicians. Witch hunts were usually conducted by the superstitious villagers as tensions grew amongst them and they use these witch hunts as a power tool to get rid of people they had issues with, real or imagined, with the authorities doing little or nothing to stop it.

Although the authorities were encouraging the locals to separate and rid themselves of witches, which caused them to turn on each other as they pointed out each other as witches, a witch hunt didn’t mean that people showed up at your door, knocked, and politely asked if there were any witches in the house. Once a person was accused of being a witch, they still had to provide some evidence in order to prosecute. The question was then, how do you prove that someone has cast a spell? The authorities needed some sort of tangible evidence such as test and signs that they were witches. In 1486 Heinrich Kramer, an Inquisitor of the Catholic Church, published a guidebook on finding witches called the Mallei Maleficarum (Hammer of the witches). It stated that the sure signs of a witch were the devils mark or witches teats. This involve the physical inspection of a suspected persons body and was conducted only after shaving all of his or hers hair off, including the public area. It told frightening stories of women who would have sex with demons, kill babies, and even steal penises. It basically gave the definition of witchcraft as well as how to investigate, try and judge cases.

The idea of the devils mark was and an folk tail which was based in the idea that a witch had made a pact with the devil and because of that, he marked her body and gave her teats so she could suckle demons and evil spirits so if a person could find these marks, you could prove, with tangible evidence, that the person was a witch. They would then test the mark by piercing it with a needle or a pin and if pain were felt or the mark bled, there was not enough evidence the person was a witch. If, however, after poking the mark with a pin or needle the person did not fell pain or there was no blood, it was the acceptable view that the person might, in fact, be a witch. Another method was called swimming a witch and the theory was that water was pure and it would reject the evil in the witch causing her to float so an innocent person would sink. Needless to say, this test always ended with a victim. The Hammer of the Witch also encouraged torture as a way to get the accused person to confess to being a witch and also always ended in the death of the accused and was justified in the eyes of the law.

English magistrates considered witchcraft a crime against the Church and the State. From Henry the 8th forward, the King is the head of the Church meaning the political leader is also the head of the Church of England so when you turn your back on the God and the church, you are also turning your back on your King. This made witchcraft an act of treason and a capital offense. Witch hunts continued through the 17th century with neighbors accusing neighbors as thousands were murdered.

In 1629, King Charles the 1st of England granted a group called the Puritans a charter to settle and govern in English colony in Massachusetts Bay. Their goal was to create a new and more perfect society based on the principles of the Bible with no separation of church and state. The Puritans remained British citizens and continues to believe that witches existed. This idea of the existence of witches was central to their belief system and they thought about it on a regularly and were genuinely worried about witched living among them. It was no surprise that the Puritans engaged in witch hunts just as they had in England.

The first witch trial in Massachusetts was not in Salem but was actually in Charlestown in 1648 when a midwife and healer named Margaret was accused of witchcraft. It was believed that she could cause death and sickness with just her touch, foretell the future and that she had a witches teat. She was hanged in 1648 and although other cases followed, it would be 40 years before a witch trial would get widespread public attention. In 1688 four Boston children were presumed to be possessed by Goodwife “Goody” Ann Glover. She was an Irish slave sold to Oliver Cromwell in the 1650’s and her husband dies there. She moved to Boston where she becomes employed as a housekeeper. At some point, four of the five children became sick and their doctor found "nothing but a hellish Witchcraft could be the origin of these maladies."(SITE HERE) She was arrested, tried and convicted as a witch and sentenced to hang.

The investigator for this particular case was Cotton Mather, a Boston Minister, who wrote a book titled Memorable Provinces, in which he describes in detail the behavior of the witch and the possessed children. This particular book was believed to have had a huge effect on the people of Salem. About 500 people lived in Salem and they had strong religious practices. Add to their beliefs the circumstances in Salem at the time and you have a village that is ripe for conducting witch hunts of its own. At the core of the Puritanism was a strong belief that women were to be docile as mothers to their children and as servants to their husbands. They had the idea that a woman was submissive and simply by her very nature, a woman was more likely to enlist in the devils service. They were not allowed to be Ministers and therefore were more likely to join the devils cause.

One of the most traumatic events of colonial America was the witch hunt 1692. The documents such as arrest warrants and death orders from that time show about 160 cases of accusations but there are no transcripts of the actual trials. Historians pieced together from other, outside documents, what they believed lead up to the trials. It is believed it started in the kitchen of the Reverend Samuel Parris. In the winter of 1691 Reverend Parris were spending time away visiting people in the parish and so they left their daughter Elizabeth, who was nine, and her cousin Abigail Williams, who was 11, in the care of an Indian woman named Tituba. As she began to speak of her childhood she would share stories with the girls of magic and power. She even began to show them some tricks. The girls, even in their young age, knew this was something that she should not be doing and that they should keep quiet about. Well as the stories kept flowing, her audience grew to six more girls who would come to hear them. The girls then began to do things, such as scream out, attempt suicide, and throw things against walls, which brought concern from Reverend Parris so he had the doctor come examine them. The doctor found no physical symptoms and concluded this must be spiritual and under the evil hand of witchcraft. Because of the Puritans belief in witches, this was readily accepted because they believed that witches could convince other to become witches and interpreted the girls’ actions as physical attempts to fight to prevent themselves from becoming witches. At this point, the girls were pressured to indentify the witch whom had infected them and they eventually pointed out Tituba and because she was a slave, there would be no one that would stand up for her. The girls also pointed out two other women Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne, this too was believable since neither one of these elderly women attended church.

On March 1, 692, the women were brought before an informal tribunal in order to establish if there was evidence of witchcraft. One significant difference between these court proceedings and our system today is the lack of involvement of lawyers. The accused was there were more depositions taken straight from accusers of crimes and a defendant was left trying to defend themselves against questioning from the judges.

The kind of evidence the Magistrate allowed in these proceedings played an important part in the trials that followed. All of a sudden they were willing to accept evidence that they would have never considered in previous witch trials in New England.

The most damaging decision of all was to allow spectral evidence, meaning the accused appeared only to the accuser in either some form or that of a specter that only the accuser could see. The girls began claiming they saw this with Sarah Good and that her specter tried to convince them to write in her book. With each denial from Sarah, the girls would cry and scream, claiming her specter was actually attacking them in the court. Needless to say, this was perceived as evidence that Sarah Good was in fact a witch. It would be the testimony y of Tituba that would change the course of the trial as she confesses almost immediately to doing witchcraft. Over the next three days, she would tell tales of talking animals and spectral visits to harm the children. She was basically telling them what she thought they wanted to hear. She told of a tall man from Boston who who told her to write her name in the devils book in blood. She was asked how many names were in the book. She told them nine names were in the book. Hers, Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne and six names she could not see. This shook everyone because it meant that there were more witches in the village. In this atmosphere the accusations began to spread, but now the girls were not just accusing women from lower standard, but now, no one was exempt from being accused.

It wasn’t until a matronly woman named Rebecca Nurse, who hardly fit the image of a witch, was accused did Salem begin to split on the issue. Most of those who supported her were from the East, had more liberal views and were better off financially. In general, accusers were of lower status and lived in the Western part of Salem. 30 people signed a petition attesting to her character.

The youngest person to be accused was Dorcus Good, the daughter to Sarah Good. It became clear at this point that something needed to be done as so the witch hunts moved from statements and depositions to official trials. The trails continued much as the preliminary hearings had with judges accepting testimony and spectral evidence as fact and the girls continued their finger pointing. They loved the attention they ere getting in a time and place when women had now voice. Here they were, having the ears and attention of men hanging on their every word. The authorities did not check the validity of their accusations and even more people were sent to their deaths.

Eventually the girls began to accuse people who not thought of to be witches such as men, children, ministers and the upper class. Rumors began to circulate that they were going to accuse the wives of Reverend Mather and Governor Phips, and with that, the girls had gone too far. The Governor dissolved the court and moved the trials to Superior Court. Spectral evidence was no longer allowed and the remaining people were acquitted. Tituba was sold back into slavery as a way to pay her expenses.

Five years passed before the Salem community recognized its mistakes and on January 16, 1697, they held a public fast and all twelve jurors signed a petition as a public showing of their repentance. There were other significant dates that followed. In 1702 a modest inquiry into witchcraft was published by John Hale that expressed one of the most profound apologies. In 1706, Ann Putnam Jr, blamed the devil for her actions in taking innocent lives. She was the only accuser to ever apologize. In 1711 the Commonwealth on Massachusetts reversed the verdicts of 22 of the 31 people convicted, restoring their civil rights. The state paid 600 pounds in restitution to the survivors and their families. It wasn’t until 1957 that the remaining nine sentences were reversed.

There are several things about this have repeated itself throughout history and even in today’s society where fear and ignorance overshadows reasoning and common sense. These events had a profound effect on the nation’s justice system causing it to never again presume someone guilty until proven innocent.

Famous American Trials. (2010). Retrieved September 17, 2010 from Salem Witch

Trails: http://www.law.umkc.edu/?faculty/?projects/?ftrials/?salem/?salem.htm.

Salem Witch Museum. (2010). Retrieved September 17, 2010 from Salem Witch

Trails: http://www.salemwitchmuseum.com/?education/?index.shtml.

Goody Glovers. (2010). Retrieved September 17, 2010 from Goody Glovers Story:

http://www.goodyglovers.com/?history.html.



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Economy In Mid 1700s Britain History Essay

 


The Industrial Revolution, which began in the mid-1700s first in Britain and later in Western Europe, is the most significant collection of technological, social, and economic changes in human history.


There is a lot of speculation as to why the Industrial Revolution occurred first in Western Europe, especially in Britain. Historians point to a number of factors. Built upon the economic and cultural developments of the Renaissance, Europe was already relatively wealthier than other regions of the world, thus providing the needed capital for investment in new technologies. Europe was full of competition at the time, each country wanting to be the best.


The Industrial Revolution saw through the change from manual labour to mechanical devices due to a multitude of technological advancements. We can see this mostly where steam power took over man power. Applied first in coal mining and textiles, the new techniques, new machines, and new methods rapidly spread into other industrial areas. One of these advancements was the use of steam to power transportation devices. This increased the railroad system’s efficiency and reliability, bringing the nation together into one whole market, introducing globalization and encouraging changes in steel, iron and communication facilities.


This revolution also had a great impact on other sectors in society such as politics and culture. The meaning of culture was changed drastically because of the new job openings and great increase in production of goods. The meaning of a job was evolving for many people, a lot of which benefitted from improvements in family income. On the other hand, the introduction of factories meant the loss of craftsmanship. The repetitive motions of the machines removes all mastery and satisfaction from labour.


Everyone’s life style and standard of living was now based on the technological advancements in society. Now there was a large variety of goods to satisfy everyone’s tastes and needs. Most people could now afford to own their own equipment and tools which were previously only affordable by the wealthier of classes prior to this revolution. Rapid economic growth and spreading prosperity were among the effects of the Industrial Revolution.


The revolution in transportation meant that people could now travel further than ever before. Here a whole new commerce was introduced in the form of travelling. This helps in changing cultural norms and values too as people where mixing with different societies.


The most important virtues where staying out of debt and saving what you earned. This all changed, as after the Industrial Revolution, the main word was consumption. If people didn’t buy goods off store shelves, then the shop owner wouldn’t have to order stock from the factory and so people would be made redundant from the factory and this would close down. The only way to stop this from happening was to teach people how to become intensive customers by purchasing all that say, even if they did not need it.


To encourage such consumption, the advertising industry was created, developing sophisticated techniques suggesting new needs among ordinary people. Often using manipulation, sex appeal, and other emotional inducements, advertisers have been able to get people to purchase objects and services they never felt any need of. And they could be persuaded to throw away still functioning items, in order to buy the "latest, improved" models.


Rider, Christine (1995), ‘An Introduction to Economic History’ South Western


Before this revolution, Britain was a quite different place to the one that exists today. Industrialisation brought with it new types of roads, trains and many other forms of communications which simply did not exist prior to industrialisation. So before the Industrial Revolution it was very hard to keep in touch with people in other parts of the country. News was spread by travellers or through messengers, and goods were distributed largely within the locality in which they were produced.


Because it was so hard to move around, people had to rely upon themselves and their communities to provide the vast majority of the things that they needed. Food was produced locally. Clothing was made locally, making use of animal hides and furs.


Life was, for the bulk of the population, the life of a farmer. By the 18th century the feudal system was long gone, but in its place was a system in which the people were as reliant upon each other and their master as before.


Some people were fortunate enough to benefit from imported goods which came into ports such as London and Bristol in increasing quantities from the Elizabethan age onwards. What was manufactured was done making use of natural elements.


Education was poor, only the rich being catered for by nannies and private tutors. There were of course schools and several universities. These were not for the ordinary man or woman though. Also, politics was based upon land ownership.


As McCloskey said in 1981,


"In the eighty years or so after 1780 the population of Britain nearly tripled, the towns of Liverpool and Manchester became gigantic cities, the average income of the population more than doubled, the share of farming fell from just under a half to just under a fifth of the nation's output, and the making of textiles and iron moved into steam-driven factories.”


http://www.ehs.org.uk/industrialrevolution/PH_index.htm


The industrial revolution certainly saw changes in the economy and society of Britain. There was a huge increase in the numbers of people employed in industrial sectors, manufacturing goods of all kinds, especially textiles, iron goods, and metal wares, for both overseas and domestic markets. More of the working population also came to live and work in towns and cities. A drastic smaller proportion of the working population, which is less than a third, lived in the countryside and got their living from the land.


In the early 18th Century, more than two thirds of the labour force had been in agriculture but now, towns and cities grew at an exceptional rate, due to the high rates of population growth that accompanied industrialisation.


During and after the industrial revolution, population growth and economic growth were able to occur together over the long term, unlike what has happened before, where when there was an increase in population, there was always a decrease in economic growth. However, during and after the industrial revolution, both population and economy were able to grow together.


Poverty walked with disease and death in industrial Britain during the first half of the nineteenth century. Hard working conditions, long hours of working, poor diet, overcrowded poor housing and inadequate sanitary arrangements made poor health and early death inevitable mostly for the lower classes.


One specific city which has been through vast amounts of study was Manchester. A number of important people such the literary man Robert Southey, medical luminaries like Dr James Phillips Kay and social scientists like Friedrich Engels studied these problems.


Housing conditions and the health of the public during the middle years of the Industrial Revolution cannot be separated. However, it was only when a deadly cholera epidemic spread in Manchester's poor areas that Kay and his associates were able to do something to change the housing and sanitary conditions in the inner city. They did not know how cholera spread and were only examining ways of combating this disease. They firmly believed that, only by relieving the conditions that prevailed in the worst city slums would make it possible to cure the instability that was threatening the rest of the city. However, the opportunity to take decisive action was lost. Engels, exploring these same areas of Manchester by night 12 years later, found only little change in these circumstances.


The rapid industrial growth that began in Great Britain during the middle of the eighteenth century which later on expanded to other countries provided a wide range of material for many nineteenth-century writers. The literature of the Industrial Revolution includes essays, fiction, and poetry that respond to the changes which occured in technology as well as the labour and demographic changes. Having observed the adoption of such new technologies as the steam engine and other types of new technology, the Scottish intellectual Thomas Carlyle described this period as the "Mechanical Age". The Industrial Revolution literature gives us a range of literary genres. Social critics such as John Ruskin, Henry Adams, and Carlyle examined the cultural changes that accompanied the machine. On the other hand, novelists ranging from Charles Dickens to Rebecca Harding Davis and Herman Melville provided a realistic treatment of modern working conditions. Moreover, poets such as William Wordsworth and Walt Whitman saw to the artist's role in such a world.


By the close of the eighteenth century, the early romantics began to view the emerging technology in a different light. A case in point is that in Friedrich Schiller’s ‘Letters upon the Aesthetical Education of Man’ (1795), argued that the machine was a threat to individual freedom and a destructive force on contemporary culture.


The issues surrounding the relationship between technology and culture have continued to interest critics and writers well into the twentieth century. Contemporary writers also look to literary figures of the Industrial Revolution as they address similar concerns of the role of the machine in today’s society.



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Efforts Of German Purists Since 1600 History Essay

 


In order to describe how purists have affected the German language it is necessary to define purism. Pfalzgraf (2009)  states, “there is scarcely any intellectually satisfying definition to be found in the relevant literature.” (p.138). George Thomas (1991) however does give a summary of assorted existing definitions: “Purism is the manifestation of a desire on the part of a speech community...to preserve a language from, or rid it of, putative foreign elements or other elements held to be undesirable... Above all, purism is an aspect of the codification, cultivation and planning of standard languages.” (p.12). Linguistic purism in Germany came about in the 17th century and is still active in the present day. This essay will follow the efforts of German purists in chronological order, starting with the origins of various Sprachgesellschaften in the early 1600s, and finishing with purist movements still active nowadays, such as the Verein Deutsche Sprache. Pfalzgraf (2009) splits purism in the history of the German language into six phases: the baroque era; the Age of Enlightenment; from the French Revolution to the Carlsbad Decrees; the early 19th century; from 1871 to the Second World War; and from World War 2 until present day (pp. 143-158). The attitudes, actions and success of German purists differ greatly between these various phases, therefore it is very useful to assess purism in this way in order to fully understand the impact that different purists had on the German language.


The baroque era of purism in the history of the German language ranged from the early 17th century up until the early 18th century. At the beginning of this period German was seen as an unimportant language both academically and culturally, inferior to languages such as Latin, French and Italian. German scholars on the other hand believed the German language to be both “ancient and dignified” (Pfalzgraf 2009 p.143) and also regarded it as a protolanguage (Jones 1999). Pfalzgraf (2009) goes on to write that it was “thought to be important to cultivate the German language and keep it pure from foreign influences” in order “to fend off the cultural dominance of French and Latin” (p.143). This description of the context and historical background conveys the birth of German purism. The main idea of purity in this period was to make German a culturally central language by ridding it of foreign lexical influences, and also offensive or unclear words and expressions. This in turn lead to the appearance of the Sprachgesellschaften in Germany.


Perhaps the most important Sparachgesellschaft of the baroque era was the Fruchtbringende Gessellschaft which was created in 1617 by Ludwig von Anhalt-Köthen, and lasted up until the end of the century. The Bericht der Fruchtbringenden Gesellschaft Zweck und Vorhaben (1622) declares that an association should be established “in which one would speak and write in good pure German and otherwise, in the same group, would undertake to elevate our mother tongue (as nature obliges each of us to do) in a useful and constructive fashion.” (my translation). In other words, the society was created in order to promote the vernacular use of German. One of the major ways the Fruchtbringende Gessellschaft achieved this was through its designation of names and emblems with explanatory verses to all of its members. For example, Ludwig was named Der Nährende and his emblem was a loaf of bread; Justus Georg Schottelius, a very influential figure in purism at the time, was called Der Suchende. Pfalzgraf (2009) suggests that many of the emblems given to members relate to the Italian Accademia della Crusca (founded in 1582). He writes, “The metaphor of separating the grain from the chaff expresses the idea that there are both desirable and undesirable words, phrases, grammatical constructions, etc., in every language, the former being worth taken care of, whereas the latter should be abolished.” (p.144). This analysis of the metaphor sums up what the Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft was trying to achieve. David Wellbery (A new history of German literature 2004) suggests that new discussions were created in the choosing of these emblems and verses, and that “In the very act of admitting its members, the Fruit-Bearing Society fulfilled the purpose for which it had been founded: to foster conversation and literature in the German language.” (p.279).


The Age of Enlightenment in general promoted a different attitude towards German purism. Pfalzgraf (2009) writes that the key aim of the period “was to establish German as a language of science to replace the widely-used Latin language.” (p.146). However amongst the most important purists of the age there were big contrasts in attitudes and approaches towards the standardization of the German language. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646-1716) was very much in favour of the scientific promotion of German in favour of Latin. He saw the German language as under threat because scholars favoured Latin and even French over German. He also agreed with the baroque view that obscenities and colloquialisms should not be used. However Leibniz was not totally against the use of foreign words in German. Pfalzgraf (2009) states that Leibniz agreed with the use of foreign words in academic and government writings, but believed that regular everyday German should contain no foreign influences at all. Therefore Leibniz did share some of the same attitudes to other purists regarding foreign influences, however he did not agree with the total abolishment of them. At the other end of the spectrum there was Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock, who Pfalzgraf describes as “the most extreme language protector of the Enlightenment.” (2009 p.148). Klopstock’s attitudes follow on from those brought about in the baroque era. In his book Zur Sprachreinigung im Deutschen 1789-1871 (1975) Alan Kirkness writes that Klopstock pursued “the patriotic pride in the mother tongue” (p.54 my translation). Evidence of Klopstock’s patriotism can be seen in the Memoirs of Frederick and Margaret Klopstock (1808). Early in his life Klopstock decided to write the first epic poem in German in order to “raise the fame of German literature in this particular to a level with that of other European countries” because the French “had denied to the Germans any talent for poetry” (p.5).


In his essay, Das Phänomen des Purismus in der Geschichte des Deutschen (1998), Kirkness states that there were four different approaches towards purism in the period 1789 to 1819. These were the educative-enlightening approach, the language structural approach, the radically-rational approach, and the political-nationalistic approach (p.411). An important purist of this period to mention is Joachim Heinrich Campe who followed the educative-enlightenment approach towards purism. He was not nationalistically influenced, but wanted to create a language which every German could use, even the uneducated. His intentions were to create a transparent language with no unclear foreign words. Pfalzgraf (2009) writes that Campe “was of the opinion that only a pure German language, comprehensible to every citizen, would lead to the general enlightenment of the German people.” (p.149) In his attempts to achieve this Campe created his Wörterbuch der Deutschen Sprache (1807-11), of which he accumulated five volumes. On top of that he created the Wörterbuch zur Erklärung und Verdeutschung der unserer Sprache aufgedrungenen fremden Ausdrücke (1813). In his dictionaries Campe is said to have produced around 3,500 neologisms, however only about 350 of them are still used today. Pfalzgraf suggests that Campe was perhaps not very successful due to his limited knowledge of linguistics and his superficial methods (p.150). He even tried to change the styles of contemporary writers in order to better distribute his ideas, which lead to heavy criticism from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Overall Campe was not very successful in his attempts to break the foreign lexical barrier between the uneducated and educated classes.


The early nineteenth century was also a relatively unsuccessful period for purists in Germany. This phase was characterised by nationalistically motivated purists, quite the opposite approach from that of Joachim Campe. A further difference was in who was actively campaigning for purism. Academics began to condemn the use of foreign words, in contrast to earlier times when they had accepted foreign influences in German. They believed that to create a German national unity and emancipation it was necessary to have an “unadulterated standard German” (Pfalzgraf 2009 p. 152). Many Sprachschutzvereine and journals were founded in this period. These included the failed Verein der Deutschen Reinsprache,Die Eiche and the Freies Deutsches Hochstift (which still exists today). The former two were both created by Karl Brugger, an eager patriot and nationalist. However in both, “practically nothing was achieved” (Pfalzgraf 2009 p.153). The reasons for his failures can be compared to those of Campe in the earlier phase. Brugger was not actually a qualified linguist and had poor knowledge of linguistic constructions. These two eras involved many purists, however it seems their passion outweighed their actual knowledge of the subject, leading to little impact upon the German language.


In contrast to the ineffective efforts of German purists from earlier times, the period 1871 up to the Second World War saw much success in German. A major reason for this was the abolishment of foreign words in areas of official work. Hundreds of German words replaced French ones in industry, travel, the army and the post office. For example the French word for a ‘return-ticket’, Retourbillet, was replaced with the German Rückfahrkarte. Therefore there was official support for the protection of the German language in certain public sectors.


This period also saw the creation of successful Sprachschutzvereine – organisations which had previously failed and made no impact upon the language. The most important of these was the Allgemeiner Deutscher Sprachverein (ADSV) which was founded by Hermann Riegel in 1885. This society had three key objectives. Firstly was to purify the German language through the abolishment of foreign influences. Secondly was to repair and protect the quintessential spirit and nature of the German language. Lastly the ADSV wanted to invigorate the patriotism of the German people. Perhaps this last aim can be seen as the most important, for the ADSV were more concerned with a sense of national identity rather than with the German language itself, as can be seen in the organisations motto, “Gedenke auch, wenn du die deutsche Sprache sprichst, daß du ein Deutscher bist!”  The ADVS managed to create a passion for the German language amongst ordinary Germans, causing them to join the fight against foreign influences. However after its initial success the ADSV struggled with the rise of the Nazis, who opposed the aims and activities of the foundation. Joseph Goebbels in particular was against the work of the ADSV, which came to an end around 1940.


After the end of the ADSV there was no real purist activity in Germany for many decades. However since the 1990s the battle against foreign influences has sparked up again. Where in earlier times purists were mainly concerned with the use of French words, recently the ridding of English words in the German language and anti-Americanism have become the focal points of German purism. Many refer to anglicisms as ‘Denglisch’. The Verein Deutsche Sprache is another Sprachverein which was founded in 1997. According to its website it now has over 32,000 members across countries all over the world, a third of which are friends of the German language from Asia and Africa.  The aims of the association are also stated on the website. They want to combat the anglicization of the German language; remind Germans of the value and beauty of the German language; and they do not want to lose the ability to define new things with new words. The second aim mentioned is similar to the attitudes of the former ADSV. Once again the society is promoting a sense of German pride, as well as focussing on the language itself.


In their main campaign against ‘Denglisch’ the VDS target companies and institutions which are not using the German language as it should be. For example they write protest letters to organisations which they have labelled as Sprachhunzer des Monats. On top of that they select a Sprachpanscher des Jahres (language adulterator of the year) and have also had a Tag der deutschen Sprache every year since 2001 on 30th September. Yet again however it is possible to claim that this society puts passion for the German language ahead of actual linguistic knowledge. Although the academic advisory board of the VDS is made up mostly of university professors, almost none of them are experts in the field of linguistics.


To summarise, since 1600 there have been many purist individuals and organisations in Germany which have attempted to cleanse the German language of foreign influences and restore a sense of national pride in the German people. The various attempts over the centuries have had varying degrees of success, but overall it must be argued that German purists have had little impact upon the German language since 1600. Too many of the individuals and societies have lacked the linguistic knowledge needed in order to make a difference and persuade people that the German language is in fact in danger. There have of course been successes along the way, for example in the campaigns of the Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft, the institutionalisation of linguistic purism after 1871, and, to an extent, the early years of the ADSV. Many German words have been created over the years which have successfully replaced French, Latin and English words. However the amount of success does not accurately reflect the effort put in by German purists since the 17th century. An example of this is the mere ten percent of Joachim Campe’s suggestions which were accepted into the German language. Although all of the purists have been extremely eager and passionate in their activities, the lack of actual linguistic knowledge and understanding of how language functions in a speech community has to be seen as a major reason for why they have had little impact upon the German language. Many efforts have been made since 1600, but relatively little has been achieved.



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Haiti The First Republican Country In Latin America History Essay

History » Haiti The First Republican Country In Latin America History Essay

Haiti is the first republican country in Latin America. It gained its independence in 1804 and it has the world’s first black led government. Though Haiti has a rich historical background, it is counted as one of the least developed countries in the world and it is heavily obliged to the World Bank.

Haitian geography is very diverse. From mountain ranges to coastal plains, all exist in harmony in this Caribbean island. Many selection of flora and fauna are originated there. But due to the rushed trend of modern urbanization many species have perished.

Haiti is situated near the northern boundary where the Caribbean tectonic plate shifts towards east by about 20mm per year in relation to the North American plate. This places Haiti in a very risky position, as it means that Haiti is very vulnerable to quakes, cyclones and other dire weather conditions due to the tectonic plate movements.

The worst quake to hit Haiti in about 200 hundred years was on January 12th 2010. It was of magnitude 7.0 followed by 12 aftershocks, each of magnitude greater than 5.0. It caused about 230,000 deaths, 300,000 injuries and about another 1,000,000 left homeless.

Communication methods, air, land, and sea transport facilities, hospitals, and electrical networks had been destroyed by the quake, which hampered rescue and aid efforts.

Many of the world’s countries pitched in to help Haiti back to its feet. A telethon was held and it raised about US$58 million.

With the increasing frequency of earthquakes, tsunamis and other natural disasters, Haiti was yet another unfortunate bearer of tragedy when an earthquake shook the very souls of the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere. Fortunately, support from all the ends of the Earth has come to surpass this unavoidable and unimaginable event. This report intends to give an overview of Haiti, the earthquake and the aftermath.

Haiti was the first independent country in Latin America. It is the second largest island in the Greater Antilles and is situated in the western part of Hispaniola.  Haiti gained its independence after a slave rebellion in 1804 and it is the first black led republican country in the world.  Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, and is ranked 149th of 182 countries on the Human Development Index.  About 225,000 Haitian children are working as unpaid household help, which is considered as a form of modern slavery.  It was considered and the qualified as one of the countries which are heavily in debated to the IMF and the World Bank.  

Haiti has a very diverse topography and consists mainly of mountain areas.  As a result of its varied environment, there are very special native flora and fauna which are not found elsewhere. Along with the mountainous terrains are also many small coastal and valleys.  Haiti used to be a very tropically lush and forest covered country until urbanization took over.  As humans began cutting forests to make homes, many rare species of flora and fauna were endangered and farmlands destroyed. Forests were also lost as a result of erosion which was caused due to logging, which is done to get charcoal, the most important source of fuel to the country.  

The Island of Hispaniola, shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic, is seismically active and has a history of destructive earthquakes.  Haiti is located near the northern boundary where the Caribbean tectonic plate shifts eastwards by about 20mm per year in relation to the North American plate.  The strike-slip fault system in the region has two branches in Haiti, the Septentrional-Oriente fault in the north and the Enriquillo-Plaintain Garden fault in the south; both its location and focal mechanism suggest that the January 2010 quake was caused by a rupture of the Enriquillo-Plaintain Garden fault, which had been locked for 250 years, gathering stress.  A magnitude 8.0 earthquake struck the Dominican Republic and shook Haiti on 4 August 1946, producing a tsunami that killed 1,790 people and injured many others.  The Australian government's travel advisory site had previously expressed concerns that Haitian emergency services would be unable to cope in the event of a major disaster, and the country is considered "economically vulnerable" by the Food and Agriculture Organization. It is no stranger to natural disasters; in addition to earthquakes, it has been struck frequently by cyclones, which have caused flooding and widespread damage.  

January 12th 2010, the 6th worst earthquake recorded in history with a magnitude of 7.0, hit less than ten miles from the capital of Port-au-Prince, Haiti. The preliminary earthquake was followed by twelve aftershocks greater than magnitude 5.0.  The Haitian Government reported that between 217,000 and 230,000 people had been recovered as dead, approximately 300,000 injured, and over 1,000,000 left homeless. They also projected that 250,000 residences and 30,000 commercial buildings had collapsed or were brutally damaged,  from shantytown homes to national landmarks,  including the Presidential Palace, the National Assembly building and the Port-au-Prince Cathedral.  Amongst those perished were Archbishop of Port-au-Prince Joseph Serge Miot and opposition leader Micha Gaillard. The headquarters of the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH), situated in the capital also collapsed killing the Mission's Chief, Hédi Annabi.  

Numerous countries took action to appeals for humanitarian aid, transferring funds and sending rescue and medical teams, engineers and support personnel. Communication systems, air, sea, and land transport services, hospitals, and electrical networks had been damaged by the quake, which hindered rescue and aid work; uncertainty over who was in charge, air traffic overcrowding, and issues with prioritization of flights additionally complicated early relief efforts.  Port-au-Prince's morgues were rapidly inundated; tens of thousands of bodies were buried in mass graves.  As rescues slowed down, supplies, medical care and sanitation became the main concern. Holdups in aid circulation led to angry demands from aid workers and survivors, and various pillaging and periodic violence were observed.  

Amid the extensive destruction and damage all over Port-au-Prince and elsewhere, essential infrastructure required to respond to the disaster was severely destroyed or damaged. There was substantial damage to communications infrastructure.  The public telephone system was not accessible, and two of Haiti's leading cellular phone providers, Digicel and Comcel Haiti both complained that their services had been affected by the quake. According to Reporters Sans Frontières (RSF), the majority of the radio stations went off the air and merely 20 of the 50 stations in Port-au-Prince were back on air a week following the quake.  

In the evenings following the quake, countless people slept in the streets, on pavements, in cars, or in temporary shanty towns either because their homes had been ruined, or they feared remaining structures would not endure aftershocks.  Building standards are low in Haiti and the country has no building codes. Engineers have affirmed that it is doubtful many buildings would have stood through any sort of disaster.  Structures are regularly raised anywhere they can fit; a number of buildings were constructed on hills with inadequate foundations or steel works. A spokesperson for Catholic Relief Services has projected that about two million Haitians lived as squatters on territory they did not own.  The nation also suffered from deficiencies of fuel and potable water even prior to the quake.  

On January 22nd, a charity telethon called Haiti Now: A Global Benefit for Earthquake Relief was held and was the most broadly circulated telethon in history.  Plans for the telethon were advertised by MTV Networks three days after the 2010 Haiti quake hit.  Money raised by the telethon and from the sales of its video and album, which were immediately accessible on iTunes, were spread to seven charities doing aid work in Haiti. By January 23rd, the telethon had raised over US$58 million.  

Assisting refugee immigration into Canada was discussed by Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, and in the United States, Haitian refugees were given Temporary Protected Status which allows approximately 100,000 illegal immigrant Haitians in the country to live legally for 18 months. President Barack Obama declared that former presidents Bill Clinton who is also the UN special envoy to Haiti, and George W. Bush would help raise money for Haiti's restoration. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited Haiti on January 16th to inspect the damage and confirmed that US$48 million had been raised by now in the United States to help Haiti recuperate.  After the conference with Secretary Clinton, President Préval said that the highest precedence in Haiti's revival were founding a functioning government, clearing roads, and clearing the streets of corpses to ensure sanitary conditions.  

Although the recent natural disaster was a tragic punishment to an already impoverished nation, the subsequent worldwide support in rebuilding Haiti could be viewed as a blessing in disguise. While Haiti was the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere, with all the new investments and attention, it could very well become one of the hot-spots for international travel and tourism. The worldwide efforts made for these wonderful people will no doubt improve more aspects of everyone’s lives, though indirectly. Fortunately, Haiti was not overtaken by war and intentional killing for anyone’s gain. This makes for a peaceful reconciliation with their future. Haiti will soon be the physical paradise to match its people’s kindness.



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How Did Napoleon Create And Maintain Power History Essay

In George Orwell’s famous novel Animal Farm, Napoleon used many tools of propaganda to gain power and control over the farm. The sheep perhaps were his most important tools throughout the novel. They were, without doubt, a deciding factor in Napoleon’s rise to power.

From the very start Napoleon had been an obvious leader among the pigs because he was well known for “getting things his own way”. By contributing to the various debates that took place in animal farm, he often received lots of attention from the animals. He also gained support from some animals that were too shy to express themselves; he connected with them and persuaded them to share his views. Hence, he became a representative of these animals.

Napoleon also used propaganda in various situations to gain power. The sheep were the most susceptible to these methods and were a great help to his campaign. Snowball, the other pig who shared the position of leadership with him did not agree with him on many occasions. However, naturally he was a good speaker and could easily reach the animals minds and gain support with his speeches alone. So, Napoleon trained the liable sheep to start chanting their favourite slogan ‘four legs good, two legs bad’ at crucial parts of Snowball’s speeches to drown him out, which made it incredibly difficult for him to express his point of view to them. Because of this, Snowball could not gain much support which was exactly what Napoleon wanted. All Napoleon had to do was to put down Snowballs ideas to gain support as the animals could not be convinced by Snowball if they could not listen to him.

Napoleon gained total control over animal farm through exiling Snowball. Regardless of Napoleon’s efforts, Snowball managed to get most of the animals support on the matter of the windmill. Napoleon knew Snowball was a great threat to his position. If Napoleon did not act soon, Snowball would soon become the undisputable leader of Animal Farm. So he got rid of this threat. Using the dogs he had secretly trained, he banished Snowball from the farm. Without Snowball around, Napoleon became the undisputed leader himself. He then banned the debates and told the animals they would follow orders instead. He did this so the animals would be powerless in any decisions made on the farm. Napoleon would be running the farm without anyone there to disagree with any decisions he made.

He later sent Squealer to justify his actions. Squealer twists the truth with lies to confuse the animals to think Napoleon was right in exiling Snowball. Some phrases he uses are; “Do not imagine leadership is a pleasure" and "it is a deep and heavy responsibility” [1]. These make Napoleon seem sacrificial, which will help gain the animals’ sympathy. He also uses the animals’ fear of Jones coming back to persuade them that Napoleon is right.

He creates power using many methods. Making the animals March past Old Major’s skull is reinforcing his leadership and also allies himself with the loved pig. It makes the animals respect the new leader as much as the old leader. In Napoleons’ speeches he uses the word ‘sacrifice’ and ‘own contribution’ to make the animals think that what they are doing is for a greater cause which convinces them to "sacrifice’ for the ‘greater good’. Napoleon uses Squealer to explain anything and everything to avoid making mistakes himself. Squealer uses complicated vocabulary which the simple-minded animals do not understand. When the animals protest, squealer quickly persuades them with help from the threat of violence from the dogs; it makes the animals stop with their complaints. The sheep are then used to ease the mood by bleating their slogan. It is then not possible for the animals to protest again. Throughout the novel, it becomes routine for the dogs to be seen in public with Napoleon to reinforce his power through violence.

Napoleon also makes the animals work so hard that they are so tired and they forget how they are being turned into slaves by their leader Napoleon. They also have no time to consider rebelling against him. He does this by making the animals build the snowballs windmill that he considered useless when snowball thought of it. To explain this, he tells the animals that it was originally his idea. Napoleon exploit’s the animals’ weaknesses. When he changes the seven commandments to justify his actions, the animals are doubtful because they remember that the seven commandments were different. However Squealer tells them that they are wrong and it is just a figment of their imagination. The animals think that if napoleon says so then he must be right and so they let him get away with it.

Napoleon is an opportunist. When he realises that he can turn a situation, whether good or bad, to his advantage, he does without a second thought about whom or what might have to be removed in order for him to succeed. For example, when the windmill collapses, he tells that Snowball destroyed it and turns the animals against him. From that point onwards he makes Snowball a scapegoat. Whenever something goes wrong, it is because of Snowball. This makes the animals feel that they are lucky to have Napoleon as a leader. It is also an easy way out as it keeps the animals from finding out who is really to blame. This reinforces Napoleon’s leadership position as he will not be blamed for anything that goes wrong and creates the vision that Napoleon’s is a perfect leader. With his decision regarding the timber, he uses Snowball to back him up. Since the animals are against him, the farm he is not selling to will have Snowball hiding there. This makes the animals support his decision.

He maintains power through various means. By rarely appearing in public he makes it seem that he has more important matters than the animals and that they should be lucky when he does appear. Through the various killings, he eliminates anyone who is a likely threat to his leadership such as the four porkers. The others who are killed had always angered him in some way or form, such as the hens who decided to rebel; they were killed as a warning not to disobey him. At the same time, he further destroys Snowball’s reputation by making the animals confess that he was planning to kill napoleon. By using statistics, another form of lies, he convinces the naïve animals that the farm has grown and flourished under his rule, again making him appear an admirable leader.

There are other methods he uses to maintain power. He is given tittles like ‘Protector of the sheepfold’ to make the animals see his acts of sacrifice and his birthday is celebrated which makes him appear like a god, as the animals must celebrate the day he was born to thank god for his birth. He even has a poem about his greatness inscribed on the wall with a portrait of him next to it just opposite the seven commandments. This makes him appear as powerful as the very principles of animalism.

He is guarded by dogs and has a food taster so that he cannot be poisoned. He spreads rumours about the terrible state that the animals on other farms are kept to make the animals feel privileged to be in animal farm. He shows his ‘brilliance’ by letting the animals see the banknotes he traded for the timber. This shows the animals that there are many luxuries to be gained under napoleon’s rule. He makes everything seem like a victory to cover up his mistakes and to keep the animals from blaming him. An example would be the blowing up of the windmill. It makes the animals feel that although there was a ‘slight’ loss they still won. This can be seen when he uses the phrase “readjustments instead of reductions” [1] to make reducing of food seem not too bad. There are more celebrations to cover up the animals hunger and needs.

Animal farm is also proclaimed as a republic, with Napoleon as its president to make it appear as if he is just watching over the animals and not controlling them. He allows Moses to remain when he returns as he spreads false hope which makes the animals continue labouring, hoping that if life is bad now, maybe one day, Moses’ stories might come true and life will be better. When Boxer, the highly respected horse and role model among the animals is taken away to be slaughtered, the animals are told that he received the best medical care available but was unable to be kept alive. Boxer’s death is then manipulated to Napoleon’s advantage. Napoleon tells the animals that Boxer’s last words were Napoleon is always right. Since this was one of Boxer’s favourite mottos, it is a likely lie. The animals then make this their own motto to respect their beloved Boxer. This works out incredibly well for Napoleon.

Napoleon was a treacherous character and very much an opportunist of the worst kind. He used brilliance, cunning, treachery, propaganda and many other tools to gain, create and maintain power. Animal farm remained under his tyranny throughout the entire novel.



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Effects Of Globalized Capitalism On Kenya History Essay

 


Living in the United states we tend to be sheltered from the lives and proceedings of other countries. Many of the African countries, aside from everyone blaming them for the spread of Aids, are kept a silent mystery for the most part. Kenya, as i will research, i feel Globalization and the culture of capitalism maybe haven't found their way to Kenya(due to its culture of poverty), or Globalization plainly has not been good for Kenya and its people.


The history of the colonized settlement of what on june 11 1920 became Kenya, can be given credit to that of the Masai Tribe from the northern parts of Africa as having settled and sustained life for generations, where they still currently reside. They may have migrated from the north in the mid 18th century establishing themselves and dominating the land around them up until the present day. The East African Protectorate (aka Kenya) at the time was run by the Sultan of Zanzibar who ultimately claimed imminent domain of this country and had the name changed to his liking. (Geographical Journal).


Roughly within the 1800's, while Kenya was formerly known as the East African Protectorate, Britain leased land from the Sultan of Zanzibar creating the Britain Protectorate. Its been said that people were encouraged to migrate from South Africa, and parts of Britain, creating settlements in the Highlands (where there were large amounts of undeveloped land) with intentions to create a profit from establishing a rail line (shipping goods) to separate ends of what later became the Colony of Kenya. These people had migrated with the intention to further develop land, however, many seemed to lack the help or the funds for help, and this is where African slave labor, or slave trade began. The more affluent settlers began to take on the help of indentured indians they brought over, and this is where the exploitation and inhumanity of a culture and its people began. Those that couldn't afford to hire the indians bought into the slave labor, forcing the impoverished africans to work, or else they were abused, or land would further be taken from them. In 1920 the two Protectorates joined forces and changed their name to the Republic of Kenya, building a new constitution. Kenya at the time was becoming largely prosperous and many people began migrating over in search of a new and better life, as well as looking for food and labor. This created quite a bit of tension, as Britain migrated many indians over as indenture slaves, dis-regarding the Africans ability to work, as Kenya was trying to establish herself as an African country, and wanted to keep it inherently to natives of Africa. The problem at the time was that the money was coming from the Brits so the colonization of Africa and her people were automatically accustomed to slavery and the de-colonization (dispossession of their land) from the beginning. As these new settlers found work, many of the natives were unable to employ work as well as they are dispossessed from their own land, moving them to reservations and only allowing the white Europeans access to the fertile farming land (similar to that of Native Americans).(www.worldhistory.net) There really wasn't much change in progress with Kenyan rights and dominance of her land until after World War 2, when a native African was finally elected to office. The lives of Kenyans would soon change as the expanse of colonialism would keep them oppressed and away from Kenya's economical success over the formative years of Kenya's youth. It wasn't until the 1960s that Kenya started to gain its independence and allow its people comfort with its first African political party. Kenya finally began to prosper as it opened up its doors to outside investors and the economy grew until it suddenly began to flounder again in the 1990's under a new colonial rule and its on going political corruption, as well as the prevalence of AIDS/HIV. (Oxford Journal).


The population of Kenya has grown substantially over the years, however the true consensus of the population will never be fully grasped as the dementor AIDS plays a huge rule in dividing the population ever so frequently. The population in Kenya is roughly 40 million people and ever expanding as birth control is not of main priority of its inhabitants. Due to Aids, the life expectancy is lowered dramatically and their are higher infant mortality rates as well.


The main tribes of Kenya are the Boni, which seem to migrate in and out of Kenya and Somalia looking for food and labor, as well as the Maasai, who mainly roam Kenya looking for food, who wish to remain a part of their own culture and traditions and not be forced into modern forms of work. The rest of the population consists of other African migrants, as well as British and Indian immigrants.


Kenyans to this day seem to struggle to find work, with its lack of economic diversity which lends itself to lack of opportunity. Whether its because foreigners still reign the labor aspect of the economy, or the economy is under such distress that it seems it cant produce enough work for the large population, as 40% of the population is unemployed. At least half of Kenya's inhabitants lives at or below the poverty line, giving us an idea as to why there are political uprisings every so often, as the people of Kenya want to be treated fair and humane, seeking proper humane and civil rights just as the rest of the world.(www.cia.gov) At least half of the people living in rural areas in Kenya are living in poverty. 75% of the population find themselves living in rural areas and and the rest in urban environments. At least three quarters of the population rely on the land for food and for jobs.


In terms of Consumption Kenyans don't consume nearly the amount of resources we here in the states consume, but for the size of the population and the struggling economy they do ok keeping up with the rest of the world in the amount of products they distribute. Their GDP is estimated around $31 Billion, give or take. It was said back in 2001 the average household consumes in a year only $215 US dollars to put how extremely poor many Kenyans truly are in perspective. Somewhere between one quarter and one half of the population earns less than one U.S. dollar per day. They consume roughly 76,000 barrels of oil per day, (to our 19.6 million per day) which ranks them at 86th in the world. They consume roughly 4.86 billion kilowatts of Electricity per capita,(to our 13.638) which rates them at 107 in the world. Even though the population of Kenya doesn't compare to that of the U.S., Kenya consumes 320 times less resources than we do here in the States. That says a lot about the frugality and the lack of economy of the Republic of Kenya. (www.cia.gov) The biggest problem that Kenya faces in terms of Consumption, is with its waste management. Many people today are composting to help save the waste piles from growing, but with so many people unemployed and uneducated its hard to turn their focus to being eco-friendly. With the rapid growth of population its hard to keep up with the amount of waste people are creating thus allowing the spread of landfills/diseases the ability to increase as the welfare of the people continues to decrease.(www.sciencedirect.com)


Kenya, with its lack of Economical success, claims there are roughly 4 million people that live in constant hunger. These people have found themselves dwelling in a culture of poverty they cant seem to pick themselves up out of. With their lack of access to clean potable water, healthcare and education, many Kenyans continue to have babies and spread diseases, living without the primitive amenities many of us take for granted. The weather plays a crucial role in terms of why people migrate to urban areas looking for work and food. The erratic weather forces many people to starve as the arid climates cant produce enough precipitation for those who farm to produce enough food for their people. Sex work is a large part of the underground economy, which has also given rise to the spread of disease. Aside from poor weather, poor governmental policies and bad international trades seem to hinder the potential for better agriculture practices. So in the meantime half of Kenya struggles to survive, hungry, living in very desolate places mostly because the hierarchy selfishly denies its people humane rights.(www.kenya-advisor.com)


Not only does the weather play a factor in the environment, government deforestation and soil erosion often leads to poor agriculture practices leaving even more farmers to migrate in search of undeveloped (not ruined) land. With only 8 percent of land actually able to be farmed and 75 percent of the workforce work as farmers, we see why the environment causes devastation among the natives. Water pollution from the lack of proper waste management leaves a lot of the clean water under distress. The government doesn't put its money back into the treatment of water as it should, nor does it focus much attention on irrigating what little land they have to produce food. (www.sciencedirect.com) The water quality is often really poor in most rural areas as globalization hits mostly urban areas, however, takes what few resources it wants from the poor in those rural areas, leaving the water quality poor by polluting it with waste run off. Capitalism in urban areas of Kenya affect how everything is treated as we see its focus is never to clean the water or present the unemployed with jobs, but its to present its pockets with excess amounts of cash to go and squander in other countries as opposed to reinvesting into its own culture to raise the standards of the environment.


Aids runs rampant in and around Kenya. Kenya is home one of the worlds greatest epidemics of Aids. Whether this is due to lack of education or overpopulation Aids has had a presence in Kenya and taken many lives for the past few decades. Over the past 10 years or so, education and awareness about Aids and prevention has grown so has the death rate, however, the rate of people acquiring aids has dropped. Sex workers were the first group infected as they had no means of knowing how to prevent the spread of disease or prevent pregnancy. In 2000 13.6 percent of the population had acquired aids, and since then it has dropped by half with efforts to educate those with aids about the spread of the disease as well as educating children as increased. Each year since 2001 The governing bodies in Kenya have made drastic efforts to increase not only awareness of aids, but condom use and production as well (the geographic journal). Healthcare, in Kenya was free for many years after its independence, structuring free health care for everyone in its constitution. This was implanted with hopes that the free healthcare would in turn lead the economy towards great success if everyone was happy and healthy. However, over the years and with economic downturns the restructuring has left many people without the benefit of healthcare. Its said that in the U.S. their are 26 doctors to everyone 10,000 people, well in Kenya there is one doctor to every 10,000. With a struggling economy those fortunate enough to get educated and become doctors, 51% of them leave the country to seek a better life for them and their family leaving the country to deal with their lack of healthcare providers. The shortage of Doctors in Kenya have given the government problems with sustaining the health of its citizens as well as with the education and prevention of the widespread disease AIDS.


Everyone longs to live happy, full, rich lives. However, the indigenous tribes of Kenya struggle to do much of anything as the globalized markets have taken away most of their land and left them stripped with very little to survive. Their language and culture are threatened as modern globalization and tourism plays a major role in redeveloping the urban areas of Kenya. As money is scarce and many natives are being uprooted and moving to urban areas, they are being forced to work in sectors of markets they would never have worked. They are being forced to learn new languages to assimilate and fit in. As English and other languages continue to spread to remote parts of the world, the indigenous in Kenya, if they want to survive are almost forced to give up what they know, their culture, and change to accommodate the globalization that is taking place. Many businesses in this day and age of capitalism are seeking new markets, and new products so they have forced their way into the markets of the Africans, providing jobs (maybe), but forcing them to change and grow into the new modern cultures that are being created in the urban setting. (capitalism in Africa, science direct).


As poverty has cursed most of Kenya, the people riot for food and humanity mostly. As their agriculture cant sustain enough food for its people, the people in turn resist the government and protest for their lives (essentially). Many of the natives to Kenya are protesting oppression as they refuse to be displaced from their land for environmental destruction. Many people choose to not side with the modern political movements so they resist conforming to the modern ways of which globalization has affected their cultures. Since the early 1990's people have taken to the streets to protest the hardships which have been caused mostly by political corruption, or by globalization. To this day people protest for Humane and civil rights, to expand the constitution to implement proper law to serve all of its people, not just those with capital. (Ray Bush, Journal of Agrarian Change).


In determining whether or not globalization has helped or hindered Kenya, i think its in plain sight that we see that the inequality and economic development which hurts their culture. Many people are forced out of their "homes" for agriculture use, or deforestation, or because their isn't food or potable water nearby. We see that healthcare isn't sustaining the needs of the people, as many doctors leave their culture in search of a better life, where food and money may be in abundance. We see that people are forced to riot for food and against oppression as well as saving the identity of their culture. With labor markets not possessing enough jobs for people, this allows for us all to see that Kenya cant provide for its people the simple necessities of life. With many people being forced to learn other languages and/or cultures, it doesn't readily help the natives adapt, it helps the big business adapt as they use the people to redeem a profit. You would think with the severity of AIDS, and the high death rates, that politicians would do anything to sever the relationship with AIDS and their people, to help bring the country back to a a prosperous land, and allow it to be a place that welcomes any and all cultures, but doesn't force one onto the other, forcing people to leave their identity for another one on the behalf of globalization.



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Eisenhower A Politician And General History Essay

 


The United States along with Britain, Canada, and other Allied countries had begun on their mission to defeat Germany in Europe. To do this, they had to first start in France which had been under German control since June 22, 1940. The Beaches of Normandy were the perfect gateway into the German frontier and were a vital location to be captured. As commander of the Allied forces in Operation Overlord, Dwight D. Eisenhower was the most significant member in his ability to foster cooperation through outstanding leadership qualities. Eisenhower, with a variety of techniques and skills, earned himself this title through what he was able to accomplish both politically and militarily. Without what Eisenhower brought to the table due to his political and military backgrounds, the largest sea to land invasion to this day would not have ran as smoothly as it did.


Eisenhower first began his tremendous military career graduating 61st out of a class of 164 from West Point. After graduating in September of 1915, he was commissioned a Second Lieutenant of Infantry and reported to Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas. Eisenhower served with the Infantry until February 1918. He then served with the Tank Corps until January 1922. He was promoted to First Lieutenant on July 1, 1916, Captain on May 15, 1917, Major (temporarily) on June 17, 1918 and to Lieutenant Colonel (temporarily) on October 14, 1918. On June 30, 1920, he was reverted to permanent rank of Captain and on July 2, 1920 was promoted to Major. In January 1922, Eisenhower was assigned as executive officer to Brigadier General Fox Conner in the Panama Canal Zone. Conner was an expert on military history and they spent hours talking about military and international problems. Eisenhower said, “Fox Conner was the ablest man I ever knew.” Connor arranged for Eisenhower to attend the Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. He then graduated in 1926 as the top student in a class of almost 250. Eisenhower then went on to be the top of his class at the Army War College. He continued to excel in staff assignments serving under both General Douglas MacArthur and General Walter Krueger. After Pearl Harbor was attacked by Japan on December 7, 1941, General George C. Marshall called Eisenhower to Washington for an assignment as head of the War Plans Division. (Dwight David Eisenhower)


Now the time had come to prepare for the greatest land and sea invasion the world has ever seen. Dwight Eisenhower was put in as Commander of the European theater and it was his job to plan and execute the operation. Eisenhower knew the task to invade Hitler’s “Fortress Europe” was going to be a difficult and bloody one. The ports of Le Havre and Cherbourg were massively fortified and therefore would not be good landing spots. This caused Eisenhower to select five landing sites on 21 miles of sandy beaches. The American beaches included Utah and Omaha on the west and the British and Canadian beaches Gold, Sword, and Juno to the east. Prior to the actual invasion Eisenhower had the Allied planes photograph enemy defenses, drop supplies to the resistance, bomb railways, attack Germany's industries and isolate the battlefield. The Allied Navel forces were ordered to escort convoys, patrol and protect the English Channel, scout out beaches and beach defenses, and conducted numerous amphibious rehearsals. Meanwhile, the three airborne and six infantry divisions from the United States, Britain and Canada trained and rehearsed their roles in operation. (Normandy)


Politically, Eisenhower was faced with a very difficult task. He was forced to be in charge of the complete cooperation between the forces of three Allied countries. The Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF), was formed so that it was the only organization that gave orders to Eisenhower; it was the nearest thing possible to having only one government in which to answer. The objective of Eisenhower’s headquarters was to build a structure of command and staff that emphasized Allied unity and the cooperation of the several national armed forces that would fight the battles. Eisenhower therefore selected men he knew from his previous staffs and blended British and American officers into a single organization. The primary objective of the SHAEF staff, Eisenhower said was to, "utilize the resources of two great nations . . . with the decisiveness of a single authority." This was not an easy task for him; it forced him to create a technical and emotional atmosphere necessary for the Allied command to function properly. He began to face more problems when Air Chief Marshal Trafford Leigh-Mallory argued that poor landing zones and German resistance would result in the "futile slaughter" of two fine airborne divisions. Eisenhower strongly insisted that the landings could not proceed otherwise and overrode his air commander's objections.


In the end, Eisenhower proved to be correct in this issue; his determination to prevail in the debates reinforced his authority as Supreme Commander. (Dwight David Eisenhower)


Now the time had come for Operation Overlord to take place. Originally, Eisenhower decided that June 5th would be D day, but poor weather conditions the day before forced him to postpone the invasion until the 6th. Some ships had already left port and had to be recalled. The elements were crucial in planning the attack. Another delay would have meant putting the whole operation off until at least the 19th, the next date when the moon and tides would be optimal for an attack. Once the pieces of the Operation Overlord had been set in motion, there was nothing more the Supreme Commander could do to affect the results. He placed the issue in the hands of the few thousand brave men at the five beaches of Gold, Sword, Juno, Omaha, and Utah. (Roberts)


Before the amphibious invasion began Eisenhower organized a series of airborne operations. In the west, planes dropped several hundreds of American parachutists belonging to the 101st and 82nd airborne divisions to control the surrounding roads. This was done in order to slow down the German counter-attacks following the landing. In the East, the 6th British airborne division was charged to carry out the same work. Bridges in the east of the invasion area were crucial objectives that the parachutists had to capture. Of the 18.000 parachutists, about a half was killed. Germans became more and more disorientated and the communications to their front did not pass efficiently any more. The landing could now finally begin. (D-Day Normandy)


Though badly scattered and lacking much of their equipment, the brave paratroopers kept the Germans occupied and helped ensure that the "Utah" Beach assault went relatively easily. The British and Canadian attacks, assisted by an air-dropped division on their eastern flank and a longer naval bombardment, also went well. In the "Omaha" area, deep beaches backed by steep hills meant that the U.S. troops landing there were exposed to heavy fire from enemy small arms, machine guns and artillery. Casualties were very great and the assault only succeeded after a day of brutal fighting, with warships coming in close to provide direct gunfire in support of the hard-pressed soldiers. The casualities for the Allied troops on D-day were 53,700 dead, 18,000 missing, 155,000 wounded. For the German troops it was 200,000 dead, wounded and missing as well as 200,000 captured. The Allies won the battle, liberating France and Western Europe from the German Army. (D-Day)


Through D-Day, Eisenhower's most marked characteristics were his unfailing optimism about the success of the invasion and his determination to overcome all obstacles that stood in its way. As more operations during the war developed across northern Europe, Eisenhower demonstrated an exceptional mental flexibility that allowed him to exploit German weaknesses. Since the earlier days with Fox Conner, Eisenhower hated poor planning and considered it potentially dangerous. From August of 1944 through the end of the war, he made a series of important decisions that changed the course of the war. (D-Day)


With Europe in the early stages of reconstruction, Eisenhower returned to the United States in November 1945 to replace his mentor as Chief of Staff of the United States Army. George C. Marshall had overseen the building of the largest Army in the nation's history; Eisenhower presided over the postwar demobilization of that Army. He found himself testifying before Congress to oppose cuts in the military that would hinder the ability to defend American interests in the postwar world. With the passage of the National Security Act of 1947, Eisenhower became the Army's first Chief of Staff to participate in the newly created unified Joint Chiefs of Staff. In 1948 he retired from the Army to become president of Columbia University. (Dwight D. Eisenhower)


In December 1950, at the request of the European allies, President Harry Truman recalled Eisenhower to become the Supreme Allied Commander, where he directed the buildup of military forces for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). In dealing with the creation of a defense against the threat of Communism, Eisenhower and his Allied staff worked within the constraints of a Europe that was recovering from the damages of World War II and still stood on the edge of economic collapse. His most enduring contribution was developing a sense of partnership and self-confidence among the NATO member nations. Europeans found that they could trust a man who shared their desire for peace. Eisenhower believed that his NATO command was unique. It was the first time, as he later commented, that a multinational army was created "to preserve the peace and not to wage war." (Ike's D-Day)


In 1952 he accepted the Republican Party's nomination for President of the United States and defeated Democrat Adlai E. Stevenson in the November elections. The quality of leadership that distinguished Eisenhower the soldier also served him well in the presidency. The diverse challenges of more than thirty years of service in the Army and as an international leader increased his natural gift for command. He had the considerable advantage that many of the leaders of the postwar world were old friends whom he had come to know well during the war, and with whom he already had a sound working relationship. Eisenhower's military experience also proved invaluable in determining his style of Presidential leadership. Based on techniques that had served him well in SHAEF and NATO, he used a chief of staff to keep track of the day-to-day operations, freeing him to keep a close eye on all of the administration's business. The new President's major concern was the continued quest for international peace that had been his focus in his years with NATO. (Normandy)


Through all of his accomplishments Dwight D. Eisenhower had proven himself as one of the best politician-generals the United States of American had ever seen. His brilliant tactics became a significant reason the Allies were able to win World War II. Without Eisenhower’s decisive plans conquering Hitler’s “Fortress Europe” would have been nearly impossible given all he did. The central fact about Dwight David Eisenhower is that he accepted the responsibility for making important decisions at critical points in the history of his nation and the world. The most dramatic of those decisions, and the ones for which he had consciously prepared himself throughout a long military career, produced the Allied victory in Europe in 1945. He dedicated himself to the cause of peace during his eight years in the White House. He won the trust and confidence of the common man, both in the United States and the world. To Eisenhower, as a soldier and as a statesman, duty came first. This is best shown in his speech in June of 1945 after being awarded the Freedom of the City of London. "Humility must always be the portion of any man who receives acclaim earned in the blood of his followers and the sacrifices of his friends." (Ike's D-Day)



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Early Law During The Salem Witch Trials History Essay

 


“Hearsay, gossip, stories, unsupported assertions, surmises”, spectral evidence, the witch’s touch, and the witches mark. What about the first, fourth, fifth, sixth, eighth, ninth, or fourteenth Amendment protections? Not in the early days of the United States. Let us look at an example of early law: The Salem Witch Trials. The Salem Witch Trials have a more profound explanation than what most people know, and before we take a look at the trials that occurred during the springtime of 1692 (Puritans, 2008).


We will start in the earlier days of what is known as the Puritan movement in England. The Puritan movement began around the late 1500’s and early 1600’s. Puritans religious beliefs centered on the word of G-D: The Bible. The difference though, centered on the beliefs and ideologies, and the way that the Puritans interpreted the Bible, to Puritans the Bible was the law. They took a very literal, word for word translation of what they thought the Law should be (Puritans, 2008).


Many of the laws that the early settlers of the States interpreted, came from Mosaic Law. In the textbook, American Legal History: Cases and Materials (2005) we get many examples of the Puritans incorporation of the Mosaic Law into their own statutes. Many of those laws can be seen in, “The Laws and Liberties of Massachusetts” manuscript. As can be noted in the “Capital Law” section of the manuscript, many if not most of the punishments lead to death. Among those capital laws, as the second forbidden law, was, “If any man or woman be a witch, that is, hath or consulteth with a familiar spirit, they shall be put to death” (Hall, Paul, & Ely, 2005). They included the books of Exodus and Deuteronomy as their source and reasoning. How did the Puritans end up in what they considered the New World?


Around the year 1520 English Protestant leaders began to demand that change happen within the England church; this was the start of the Puritan movement. Their demands were that the church and government be conducted according to the Bible. Among their demands were that the church be run by counsels and not through the hierarchy the Church of England had imposed. Moreover, the Puritans sought out a larger emphasis on prayer, bible reading, and sermons to take place during services. They also wanted prayers to be more personal and have more spiritual devotion to G-D, in contrast to the prescribed prayer that the England churches had adopted (Puritans, 2008).


By the year 1642 the Puritans gained much power in the Parliament and a civil war broke out, known as the “Puritan Revolution”. By 1649, under the leadership of Oliver Cromwell, the Puritans seized control of the government. During their reign the Puritans passed many unpopular statutes in England. Even though witch hunting and trials were practiced prior to the Puritan reign (Puritans, 2008). It was during their reign that the majority of witch trials and actual deaths occurred.


Between the years of 1649 to 1658,the time of the Puritans’ reign, the new Puritan government purportedly executed around 4000 witches (Carlson, 2000). Cromwell died in 1658, and by 1960 the Puritan reign ended. Many of the Puritans were not happy with the minimalistic changes taking place within the Church of England. They eventually left England for what we now know as the U.S.A. Many of those settlements happened in Virginia, Connecticut, and Massachusetts. Among the settled colonies was Salem, Massachusetts (Puritans, 2008).


With the strong Puritan belief as G-D being the center of everything they did, and trying to live to the strict morals of the bible. It worked both to their advantage and disadvantage. Their strict and literal interpretation of the bible and its laws were almost impossible to adhere to. Each city’s church and their members were individually responsible for their relationship with G-D; actions were louder than words. Their belief in predestination led the Puritans to always strive to do well. Above all, they believed that the Devil was the root of all evil deeds; and because of that, it was a persistent teaching at sermons. Puritans, therefore, needed to be on constant alert to an act of evil. It led to one of the worst tragedies in the history of the U.S. (Puritans, 2008).


As a preface to the actual trials, Salem at this time, in 1692, was going through an economic struggle. Two of the more prominent families, the Putnam’s and the Porters’, were vying for political, social, and economical power. Salem was divided in two: Salem Village and Salem Town. The two sides were set apart by economy and class. Salem Village was also known as Salem Farms; whose citizens were know as poor farmers making their living from their hard work tending to the harvest. Salem Town, on the other hand, was considered the wealthy side of town. Most people in Salem Town were merchants. Moreover, those from Salem town dictated the prices of the crops that came from Salem Village; and on top of that they imposed taxes on them (Salem Witch Trials: The World Behind the Hysteria, 2010).


The cause to the hysteria of the Salem Witch Trials appears to have started with the division that was happening inside Salem Village itself. Ipswich Road is the road that separated Salem Village from Salem Town. Those from Salem Village, which lived near Ipswich Road and the commerce that Salem Town offered, began to take on mercantile trades. As they began to prosper many of those who lived in the more rural areas believed that the prosperity of those near Ipswich Road came from the worldly influences from Salem Town; and in a village where they lived by a very rigid moral code; where something as small as falling asleep at church was considered a sin; and the sinner therefore must be punished. Such interaction with the town’s people was a threat to the Puritan way (Salem Witch Trials: The World Behind the Hysteria, 2010).


With all the socio-economic problems and division that were plaguing Salem Village at the time things took a turn for the worse in 1688. John Putnam invited Samuel Parris, a somewhat successful merchant and farmer from Barbados, to become the village minister. Mr. Parris was a strong proponent for the strict Puritan way. Moreover, Mr. Parris was in total opposition to witchcraft; and he was in agreement that the prosperity in Salem town was the work of the devil. It did not help that the rhetoric that he preached at his sermons further aliened those within the village. As researcher Kay Kizer said, “it was healthy dose of fear woven throughout the fabric of the literary construction”. Moreover, students were quizzed on the sermons both in their homes and while at school. To further engrave those ideologies within the children’s minds (Kizer, nd).


Of equal importance to this debacle was the fact that children had to live by the same moral code as the adults did. Toys were said to be a way to distract you from the worship of G-D, therefore most households contained no toys; and although children were taught to read, the only type of literature in a Puritan household were bibles and other religious books. The books that were for the children, only focused on the punishment that would come if they were to disobey the law of G-D (Salem Witch Trials: The World Behind the Hysteria, 2010).


With a little background to the Puritan way, along with the political struggles going on at this time in Salem, Massachusetts; I think that we can start to see how this could all have been an elaborate scheme to bring order to a town that had two separate visions for the future of Salem. Interestingly enough, most of the accusers were from the farmland areas of the village (those opposed to the interaction with “worldly” Salem Town). While those accused, happened to reside near Ipswich Road. The following paragraphs will present the facts through the course of this horrific episode of early law.


In the waning months of winter in 1692, Betty Parris, the daughter of new Minister Samuel Parris, came down with an atypical illness. She complained of a fever, had random jactations and very erratic behavior. One explanation of her symptoms was that it could have been related to child abuse, boredom, guilt or a combination thereof. Another diagnosis came from the research of Linda Caporael’s 1976 article in Science, of a disease called, “convulsive ergotism”, “caused by a fungus which invades developing kernels of rye grain, especially under warm and damp conditions such as existed at the time of the previous rye harvest in Salem” (Linder, nd).


The most prominent theory, and the on that was accepted as truth, came from a book recently published by Cotton Mather (Linder, nd). He was a minister in the town of Boston. He and his father Increase Mather were strong proponents to the hunting of witches. His book was titled, Memorable Providences, in which an eerily similar account occurred between three children and a washerwoman; she was accused and punished for supposedly being a witch. Cotton Mather also becomes a very prominent figure in the judges appointed to the witch trials (Salem Witch Trials: The World Behind the Hysteria, 2010).


In all there were seven girls: Ann Putman, Betty Parris, Mercy Lewis, Mary Walcott, Elizabeth Hubbard, Susannah Sheldon and Marry Warren. All of who claimed to have been afflicted by witches. The first to be accused was a salve woman of Minister Parris, known as Tituba. Since Tituba was a stranger amongst those of Salem village, in a place were anyone who was different from them was not to be trusted. She was and obvious scapegoat for the village. Tituba was known for telling stories to the girls about omens, voodoo and witchcraft, it only solidified the villages’ case against her when a fellow village woman suggested that Tituba bake a “counter magic” cake that would supposedly counteract the “witch spell” the girls were experiencing (Linder, nd).


Shockingly, Tituba confessed to being a witch. Some say that it was because she really was. Other documents show that she only confessed because her owner, Mr. Parris beat her into confession and told her that if she were to confess that he would set her free (Salem Witch Trials: The World Behind the Hysteria, 2010). In her confession she named Sarah Good, a beggar and Sara Osborn, an old antagonistic woman who had not attended church service in over a year. Tituba claimed that she and the others would fly around on poles to meet with Satan, and that they had all signed his book to help torment the children. That was all the confession that was needed. It silenced most of those who thought that it was all a hoax, and led Parris and other local ministers on a full on witch-hunt (Linder, nd).


When the three ladies went to trial on March 1, 1692 it became a great deal. Hundreds had shown up. They had to move the trial to a place that would occupy the multitude. Many people started to speak of strange things happening when one of the newly accused witches had stopped for a visit. The girls described attacks by the spirits of the accused and even winched and contorted at the site of those accused of witchcraft. Magistrates Jonathan Corwin and John Hawthorne had already determined in their mind that the woman were guilty. Shortly thereafter the girls and Ann’s mother started to accuse that the ghosts of others were tormenting them. By the time Governor Phips returned, the jails were nearly full of accused witches. The Governor created a court called, “court of oyer and terminer” to deal with the witch trials (Linder, nd).


Five judges were appointed to the trials, three of them being close friend to Cotton Mather. The fourth, a gung-ho witch hunter named William Stoughton. Mather had a great influence in convincing the court that previous confession should be allowed. Along with the admission of “spectral evidence”, moreover, they allowed for the so-called “touch test” (it was assumed that if a witch touched someone they afflicted, they would be healed). They also allowed for the assessment of a defendants body. To see if they could find the “witches mark”, otherwise known as moles. Shortly thereafter the trials commenced (Linder, nd). Due to the immensity of the trials I will only give examples of trials that had a drastic impact on the village; some led to further accusations the people who were considered outsiders. While others lead to doubt amongst the village that perhaps the accusations were concocted and unjust.


One of the first accused of being a witch was Bridget Bishop. A sixty-year-old, woman tavern owner who didn’t like to pay her bills, and was disapproved by her neighbors. She was the type of social outcast that was prime for accusation of witchcraft. After all, villagers were allowed to satisfy their alcoholic indulgences at her tavern, even on a Sabbath, something that was regarded as a sacred to the Puritans. Many villagers came forth with accusations. She was accused off stealing eggs, transforming into a cat, being responsible for bad luck that had fallen upon them. She was even accused of making the side of a building fall off just by looking at it. It didn’t help her cause that other “confessed witches” testified that she indeed was a witch; and on June 10, 1692, she was hanged (Linder, nd).


Not all of those accused of being witches were of bad reputation. Many of those accused had a history of dissension with the Putnam family. Rebecca Nurse, who is said to have been a “respected woman”, was accused and found guilty; but only after Justice Stoughton had the juries re-evaluate their decision of finding her not guilty. Villagers dared not to dissent with those accusing or judging. For fear of being accused of being witches too. Such was the case of John and Elizabeth Proctor. A tavern owner himself, and once again in much quarrel with the Putnam family (Linder, nd).


John Proctor openly protested the accusation of Rebecca Nurse, and made a statement that would eventually seal his fate. After the investigation of Rebecca Nurse he stated, “If they [the afflicted girls] were let alone, so we should all be devils and witches.” He was the first man to be called a Wizard. At his wife’s trial, she was accused first, Mr. Proctor started to defend his wife, the girls immediately started to accuse him of wizardry. Both were imprisoned, and as he was in his cell he managed to write a letter to the Boston clergy, pleading that they take action claiming that, “we are all innocent”. He went on to say that the trials were unfair, and those who confessed only did so after being tortured. Although it raised awareness, it was too late for John Proctor; he was hanged August 19, 1692. His wife though was spared because she was pregnant with a child (Salem Witch Trials: The World Behind the Hysteria, 2010).


Another, Giles Corey suffered perhaps the most gruesome death. Giles Corey refused to go to trial; and as per the law at that time, if you refused a trial, the penalty was, “peine et fort” or, death by pressing. Perhaps the most significant hanging was that of George Burroughs. He was living in Maine at the time. Burroughs had over thirty accusers. He was claimed to have bewitched soldiers in 1688-1689, in a war against the Wabanakis, a tribe from the nearby lands. It was a failed war, and as historian Mary Beth Norton says in her book, In the Devil’s Snare that, “it is a key understanding to the Salem Trials” (as qouted in, Linder, nd).


Among the accusations, he is said to have flown one of his accusers to the top of a mountain and, “promised her all the kingdoms if she would sign his book”, sound familiar? Check Mathew 4:8. The greatest testament to the eventual change in these court cases happened before Burrows was hung. It was said that it was impossible for a witch (or wizard, in this case) to recite the Lords’ prayer, and Burrows recited it perfectly, causing the crowd to become “greatly moved”. Doubts began to blossom. With so many prominent people being accused; John Hale said, " It cannot be imagined that in a place of so much knowledge, so many in so small compass of land should abominably leap into the Devil's lap at once." (as qouted in, Linder, nd).


Soon thereafter, Increase Mather, the father of Cotton Mather enacted what was called, “America’s first tract on evidence”, and another work titled Cases of Conscience were Increase Mather says, “were better that ten suspected witches should escape than one innocent person should be condemned." Although, it is said the his change of heart on witch hunting and hanging came about because he was informed that his wife was next to be accused.


Also works from a highly regarded minster in Boston, Samuel Willard, wrote a work called, Some Miscellany Observations, where he mentions that the devil could form a ghost from the image of the innocent. With that, Governor Phips ordered the court to no longer allow spectral evidence, the witch’s touch test, and that “clear and convincing evidence” was required for those accused of witchery. That is all it took, those that remained to be tried were all acquitted for lack of evidence; and by May of 1693 all those remaining in prison were released. And just like that the hysteria that swept through Salem in 1692 was over (Linder, nd).


In the end over two hundred people were imprisoned. Close to twenty four were hanged, squashed to death, or died while in their prison cells. There was not much remorse amongst those who were involved. Only one Judge fully confessed and apologized. Some jurors came forward and said that they were, “sadly deluded and mistaken”. Minister Parris was replaced, but never apologized. As for William Stoughton? Not only did he not apologize, he went on to say that if he had not been interrupted my Governor Phips- who only placed blame on others while never admitting to any fault of his own- he was about to clear the land of all witches (Linder, nd). Of the seven girls who started this hysteria, only Ann Putnam came forth in a confession. In it she states that she was used as an instrument for accusing innocent people. She goes on to say that, “it was a great delusion of Satan that deceived me in that sad time” (as qouted in, Salem Witch Trials: The World Behind the Hysteria, 2010).


Many times we as individuals state that this country has a long way to go in becoming just. At times it may seem that we as a people in this country see the U.S as having a one step forward and two step backwards approach to the progress and equality of mankind, while that may hold some truth. Lest we desire to be in the times of early law as seen in the Salem Witch Trials. A time in which no Constitution or Bill of rights existed.


A time were no right to a counsel was guaranteed, no right to cross examine a witness, no manner in which to appeal, and the fear that you could be tortured into a confession; all lead to the simple joy that we should have to be able to say, yes we have progressed as a country. Albeit, at a slow and methodical cadence. We are blessed to have the protections that the Constitution affords us, to protect our freedoms and liberties against the full grasp of the government, much as was the intention of those who migrated and framed the Constitution.



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