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arrested thirty-three of the city’s Jews and burned them at the stake.
               Similar situations occurred hundreds of times over several centuries,
               resulting in thousands of Jewish deaths.
                   News began to spread much more quickly after 1439, when
               German goldsmith Johannes Gutenberg invented a printing press
               with movable type. This invention led to the widespread printing and
               distribution of broadsides (large sheets of paper printed with song
               lyrics and other text), newspapers, and books in Europe and North
               America. Printed materials played a major role in disseminating
               new ideas and information. For instance, in the sixteenth century,
               German religious professor Martin Luther used printed pamphlets
               and other documents to criticize the Catholic Church, which led
               to the creation of the Protestant branch of Christianity. In North
               America during the eighteenth
               century, colonists used pamphlets   To attract readers,
               and newspapers to criticize their
               rulers in Great Britain. This       many early
               criticism inspired colonists to
               fight for their independence in the   newspapers
               American Revolution (1775–1783).    exaggerated stories
                   Newspapers and other printed
               materials also disseminated fake    or printed entirely
               news. To attract readers, many early   fabricated news.
               newspapers exaggerated stories or
               printed entirely fabricated news.
               For example, in 1835 the New York
               Sun—previously known for its serious
               reporting—ran a series of wildly popular articles that turned out to
               be fake news. These articles detailed the supposed discovery of life
               on the moon by Sir John Herschel, a well-known British astronomer.
               According to the articles, Herschel used a telescope to view all kinds of
               exotic moon life, including unicorns and batlike winged humanoids.








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