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The Witchcraft Delusion in New England: Its Rise, Progress, and Termination, (Vol. 1 of 3) cover

The Witchcraft Delusion in New England: Its Rise, Progress, and Termination, (Vol. 1 of 3)

Chapter 8: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

This work compiles contemporary accounts and responses to the witchcraft panic in colonial New England, presenting a prominent theological defense alongside a pointed rebuttal, together with a prefatory introduction and notes that trace editions and publication history. It surveys trial practices, public credulity, and the influence of printed tracts, traces the roles played by clergy and civil authorities, and follows the gradual shift from widespread belief toward critical scrutiny by comparing local episodes with English witchcraft literature.

Imprimatur.

Decmb. 23.

1692.

Edmund Bohun.[34]

FOOTNOTES:

[34] Edmund Bohun was himself a Writer of considerable Note. The Work by which he is best known is probably that entitled The Character of Queen Elizabeth, a sizable Octavo, printed in 1693. His Writings are said to be Voluminous, yet but few of them are met with at this Day. One of the first Gazetteers was by him in a thick Octavo, 1688. He does not, however, call it a Gazetteer, but a Geographical Dictionary. His Descriptions compare singularly with those of the same Articles in Works of later Times: as for Example, he says Columbus discovered America in 1499. All the Notice Boston receives at his Hands is at the Close of an Article on Boston in Lincolnshire—"there is another Place in New England of the same Name." Under the Head of New England he gives it a much larger Notice; calls New England a Colony, "and they have built seven great Towns, the Chief of which is Boston, which in 1670, had fifty Sail of Ships belonging to it." He was Author of a Life of Bishop Jewell, and was living in 1700.