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  1. Microsoft Word - altogether.doc. Unwanted Husbands and Adultery: Medieval Marriage in the Twelfth-Century Tristan and Isolde Legend. Heli Lähteelä. A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree. of Bachelor of Arts (Hons) in History. University of Sydney October 2006 Acknowledgements.

  2. This book is a vast resource for scholars of marriage in late medieval Western Europe who will find answers to questions on the canon law of marriage and its application, important statistical analysis of patterns of marriage, and fascinating rich detail of individual cases - guided by the judicious and entertaining voice of Professor Donahue.'

    • Charles Donahue
    • 2008
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  4. According to John Hajnal (1965) the marriage pattern of modern western European societies that emerged in northwestern Europe during the fifteenth century was unique.4 Hajnal discovered a “relatively late age at first marriage for men (age 26 to 27 or older) and women (age 23 to 24 or older) and high proportion of both men and women in the ...

  5. Marriage in Early Modern Europe. Marriage. John Seiden (1584-1654), whom Milton praised as "The chief of. learned men reputed in this Land," was of two minds. The parliamentarian and legal historian could say firmly, "Marriage is nothing but a civil contract." In another mood, possibly the one that made him a student of Syrian mythology, he ...

  6. Dec 3, 2021 · Digital Abbey Library of medieval codices at St. Gallen, Switzerland. The library’s valuable holdings illustrate the development of European culture and document the cultural achievements of the Monastery of St. Gall from the 7th century until the dissolution of the Abbey in the year 1805.

  7. Jul 2, 2020 · Problems and Methods in Cultural History -- 11. The History of Value Systems -- 12. The Renaissance of the Twelfth Century: Audience and Patronage -- 13. Observations on Physical Pain in the Middle Ages -- 14. Memories without Historians -- 15. Heresies and Societies in Preindustrial Europe between the Eleventh and Eighteenth Centuries -- 16.

  8. the late medieval period (ca. the 14th century) to the early modern period (until ca. the 18th century). These themes are religion (or faith) and gender, both of which we also understand in a specific way, as lived and experienced. The mean-ing of these two concepts, religion and gender, has changed in time, space and

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