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  1. Feb 10, 2022 · Marriage was deemed to be acceptable as soon as puberty hit – for girls from around age 12 and boys 14 – so betrothals were sometimes made at a very young age. It is said that women first gained the right to propose marriage in Scotland in 1228, which then caught on in the rest of Europe.

  2. Apr 22, 2010 · People use the phrase “Middle Ages” to describe Europe between the fall of Rome in 476 CE and the beginning of the Renaissance in the 14th century.

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    • They weren’t all knights or serfs or clergy. Although certain medieval writers described their society as divided into 'three orders' – those who prayed, those who fought, and those who laboured – that became an increasingly inaccurate picture from after about 1100.
    • People had the vote. Well, some people at least. Not a vote for national, representative government – because that really wasn't a medieval thing – but a vote in local politics.
    • The church didn't conduct witch hunts. The large-scale witch-hunts and collective paranoid response to the stereotype of the evil witch is not a medieval, but rather an early modern phenomenon, found mostly in the 16th and 17th centuries.
    • They had a Renaissance, and invented experimental science. When people talk about ‘the Renaissance’, they usually mean the very self-conscious embrace of classical models in literature, art, architecture and learning found at the end of the Middle Ages.
  4. Oct 15, 2020 · Marriage was an important part of many medieval women’s lives, but not all marriages followed the neat path that the church had laid out for them. This week, Danièle speaks with Dr. Bridget Wells-Furby about fourteenth-century heiress Lucy de Thweng and what her story can tell us about medieval marriage, adultery, and even annulment.

  5. Feb 14, 2020 · From the twelfth century onwards church law (canon law) determined that all that was required for a legal marriage was the exchange of words of consent in the present tense (Yes, I do!). Although there were other requirements, such as the publication of banns and the presence of a priest, their absence did not invalidate a marriage.

  6. in the church and thereafter the marriage was celebrated publically with a feast. The following morning, to mark the consummation of the marriage, the groom gave his bride a ‘morning gift’. This 14th century image shows a man placing a wedding ring on the finger of his bride. An illustration of a medieval couple marrying from 1350.

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