Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年10月16日
The forgotten role of dogs in the Salem witch trials
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萨勒姆审判是美国历史上最臭名昭著的事件之一,这场审判对狗的影响也值得关注。虽然没有官方记录表明狗因被指控为巫师而被处决,但当时的民间传说却将狗与魔鬼联系在一起,并将其视为巫师的帮凶。在审判过程中,一些证人声称看到狗与魔鬼相伴,或被狗附身,这些说法加剧了人们对巫术的恐惧和不信任,最终导致许多无辜者被处决。

🐕‍🦺 **狗与魔鬼的联想:** 在17世纪的萨勒姆,狗是人们日常生活的一部分,但同时也与魔鬼相关联。例如,传说中王子鲁珀特的宠物狗Boy拥有超自然能力,能够变身和预言,帮助他的主人在战场上获胜。在萨勒姆审判中,一些证人声称看到狗与魔鬼相伴,或被狗附身,这些说法加剧了人们对巫术的恐惧和不信任。

🧙‍♀️ **狗作为巫师的帮凶:** 在萨勒姆审判中,一些被指控为巫师的人承认魔鬼以狗的形象出现。例如,19岁的Mercy Wardwell声称,她与魔鬼交谈,魔鬼以狗的形象出现。Tituba,一名被奴役的女性,也声称看到魔鬼以狗的形象出现。这些说法加剧了人们对巫师的恐惧,并导致更多人被指控和审判。

💀 **狗的命运:** 虽然没有官方记录证明狗因被指控为巫师而被处决,但一些民间传说却声称,至少有两条狗在审判期间被杀。例如,Robert Calef的著作中提到,一条狗被指控为巫师而被杀。尽管这些故事很吸引人,但它们无法在任何官方的审判文件中得到证实。

👻 **恐惧与不信任:** 萨勒姆审判是人们在缺乏证据的情况下,将恐惧和不信任转化为暴力行动的典型案例。在恐惧和不信任的环境中,即使是人类最好的朋友,也可能被怀疑与魔鬼有染。

🐾 **反思:** 萨勒姆审判是一段令人不寒而栗的历史,它提醒我们,要警惕那些基于偏见和恐惧的指控,并珍惜人与动物之间的信任和友谊。

Nineteen people accused of witchcraft were executed by hanging, another was pressed to death and at least 150 were imprisoned in conditions that caused the death of at least five more innocents.Each semester, a few students ask me about stories they have heard about dogs.In 17th century Salem, dogs were part of everyday life: People kept dogs to protect themselves, their homes and their livestock, to help with hunting, and to provide companionship.However, a variety of folklore traditions also associated dogs with the devil – beliefs that long predated what happened in Salem. Perhaps the most famous example of such belief is the case of a poodle named Boy who belonged to Prince Rupert, an English-German cavalry commander on the Royalist side during the English Civil War. Between 1643 and 1644, stories spread across Europe that Boy the poodle had supernatural powers, including shape-shifting and prophecy, that he used to aid his master on the battlefield.There is no mention in the official records of Salem’s trials of any dogs being tried or killed for witchcraft. However, dogs appear several times in the testimony, typically because an accused witch was believed to have had a dog as a “familiar” who would do her bidding, or because the devil appeared in the form of a dog.Numerous testimonies in the Salem trial records claim that dogs were in league with the devil, adding to the paranoia of this community that was spinning out of control.Associating the devil with the dogOn May 16, 1692, a 45-year-old Amesbury, Massachusetts, man named John Kimball testified against Susanna Martin, a 71-year-old widow, saying, among other things, that she had caused a “black puppy” to appear before him when he was alone in the woods. Kimball testified that he was terrified by the dog, which he thought would tear out his throat. The dog disappeared when he began to pray.This, among other testimony, would contribute to Martin’s conviction for witchcraft in June 1692; she was hanged on July 19, 1692.In several instances recorded by the courts, accused witches confessed that the devil had appeared to them in the form of a dog. In September 1692, 19-year-old Mercy Wardwell testified that she had been conversing with the devil, and that he had appeared to her in the shape of a dog. Her confession caused her to be jailed, although she was later released when the hysteria died down.During the same proceedings that September, 14-year-old William Barker Jr. testified that the “shape of a black dog” appeared to him and provoked anxiety; soon after this, the devil appeared. It’s hard to know if he was suggesting that the dog was the devil himself or his companion.Barker confessed that he had “signed the devil’s book,” meaning that he had made a covenant with the devil and was a witch. Barker was jailed, though he would later be acquitted.Tituba, a woman of color enslaved in the Rev. Samuel Parris’ household, also testified about a dog. When she was examined by magistrates on March 1, 1692, Tituba recounted how the devil had appeared to her at least four times, “like a great dog” and as “a black dog.” She also said she saw cats, hogs and birds, an entire menagerie of animals working for the devil.Kimball’s, Wardwell’s, Barker’s and Tituba’s testimonies certainly may have contributed to the ongoing alarm that the residents of Salem were being led astray by a devil who might appear to them in the shape of a dog.Sketchy evidenceSome popular accounts of the trials also suggest that at least two dogs were killed during the trials, but there is no evidence supporting this in the official legal testimony of the time. There is certainly some local legend that supports the claim, and many accounts of Salem have included these two dog deaths as a part of the story.According to local historical researcher Marilynne K. Roach’s 2002 book, “The Salem Witch Trials: A Day-by-day Chronicle of a Community Under Siege,” some of the afflicted girls claimed that a man named John Bradstreet had bewitched a dog. Although the dog was a victim, it was killed. Roach’s history also notes that another dog was shot to death when a girl claimed that the dog’s specter had afflicted her.Witchcraft belief at the time held that witches could send their “spectres,” or spirits, out to do their bidding.While these are compelling stories, neither of these events can be verified in any existing official trial documents. The source that Roach cites for the Bradstreet case is Robert Calef’s book “More Wonders of the Invisible World,” which was published in 1700. Calef, who was a Boston merchant, objected to how the trials were conducted. However, he was not present at the trials, and it is not clear what his source was for the dog stories. Such stories – and Calef’s uncited retelling of it – do not have the same authority as the legal documents in the case.The earliest account of a dog being shot for being a witch appears in a commentary on the Salem trials, “Cases of Conscience Concerning Evil Spirits,” published in 1693, in which the clergyman Increase Mather claims that “I am told by credible persons” that a dog was shot for bewitching a person.But significantly, Mather did not name the human victim or the person who told him the story. Surprisingly, Mather actually defended the dog, saying that the fact that they had successfully killed it meant that “this dog was no Devil.”Nearly every history of Salem recounts how when Samuel Parris’ daughters were having terrible fits that led people to believe they were bewitched, Tituba, the enslaved woman who lived in the household, baked a “witch cake” using urine from the afflicted girls and fed it to the family’s dog.Somehow, this was supposed to cause the dog to reveal the identity of the witch. Indeed, Reverend Parris condemned the ritual, which itself seemed to be its own kind of witchcraft.Fear and distrustAll around, Salem’s witch trials seem to have been bad for dogs. Although there is no official legal evidence that dogs were killed for being witches, it’s clear that there were strong associations between dogs and the devil, and that dogs were sometimes treated poorly because of superstition.The Salem trials are a horrifying example of what happens when people use terrible logic and leap to indefensible conclusions with shoddy evidence. In an environment of fear and distrust, even man’s best friend could be suspected of dealings with the devil.The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. The Conversation is wholly responsible for the content.Eds: This story was supplied by The Conversation for AP customers. The Associated Press does not guarantee the content.

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萨勒姆审判 巫术 魔鬼 恐惧 不信任
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