Difference between revisions of "Week 4 Questions/Comments"

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I found it remarkable that Elizabeth Goodman stood up against the townspeople in her New Haven colony who accused her of being a witch.  I assumed that these women would be so shocked by the accusations that they would feel powerless to do anything besides wait it out or that they would try to hide instead of face their accusors.  Clearly Godman wanted to prove to the court how unfounded the claims against her were.  I also was surprised that she wasn’t placed on trial until two years after she first sued.  It seems that the justice system was just as slow in the seventeenth century as it is today!—Caitlin Quinn
 
I found it remarkable that Elizabeth Goodman stood up against the townspeople in her New Haven colony who accused her of being a witch.  I assumed that these women would be so shocked by the accusations that they would feel powerless to do anything besides wait it out or that they would try to hide instead of face their accusors.  Clearly Godman wanted to prove to the court how unfounded the claims against her were.  I also was surprised that she wasn’t placed on trial until two years after she first sued.  It seems that the justice system was just as slow in the seventeenth century as it is today!—Caitlin Quinn
 
Just a really simple question from "A Remarkable Instance of Awakening" how does David Brainerd know that these were actual conversions if the natives we speaking in their native language? They could have been saying anything. How did the English Colonists/ Americans deal with the language barrier between them and the natives or other europeans who didn't speak english? --Katelynn V.
 

Revision as of 06:24, 20 September 2007