If my memory serves me correctly they were burned at the stake, stoned, drowned, and a few others but I think these were the main execution styles.
puritans
Nineteen people, fourteen women and five men, were hanged for witchcraft during the Salem witch panic. Another was pressed to death during court proceedings.
None, for two reasons. First, none of the executed were actually witches by any definition. Second, in Puritan New England, witchcraft was a capital crime, thus the punishment for witchcraft was hanging.
Nineteen people were executed. The hundred and a half that remained in jail until they were pardoned had to sue to regain confiscated property. Puritanism lost some of its hold on Massachusetts because of the hangings of innocent people that Puritan religion said were guilty.
Yes, there were. Possibly the most significant one was that of King Charles I, after the English Civil War. He was the first king to be tried and executed by his own people.
They were subject to public ridicule, torched then burned and hanged. Not in any particular order.
Giles Corey was the only one to be executed by what could be called torture.
the priciples were that people were responsible for their actions, even during wartime. study its on regents
In the Salem witch trails, 19 people we know of were hung, though there might have been more. Over 150 people were accused of witchcraft, and they became social outcasts since their reputation was so tarnished by the accusation.
they were the Nuremberg Trials, to try the Nazi criminals who committed murder during the WW ll atrocities against the Jewish people.
Yes, they do
The Nuremberg Trails were 13 trails held to judge leaders of Germany for their actions during World War II. These trails took place from 1945-1949 in Nuremberg, Germany.