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- 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.
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May 12, 2020 · Getting married in the medieval period was incredibly simple for Christians living in western Europe – all they had to do was say their "I do's" to each other. But, as Sally Dixon-Smith reveals, proving that you were actually married might be another thing altogether...
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Feb 10, 2022 · 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. However, this is more likely a rumoured romantic notion that had no basis in law. Marriage didn’t have to take place in a church.
In France, until the French Revolution, the marriageable age was 12 years for females and 14 for males. Revolutionary legislation in 1792 increased the age to 13 years for females and 15 for males. Under the Napoleonic Code in 1804, the marriageable age was set at 15 years old for females and 18 years old for males.
Mar 18, 2019 · Did women have any rights in Europe in the Middle Ages? Women were considered second-class citizens in Europe during the early Middle Ages and essentially the property of their father or husband. They gained greater autonomy by the late Middle Ages and, throughout, found ways to establish individual rights.
- Joshua J. Mark
Jan 10, 2015 · Until two centuries ago, said Harvard historian Nancy Cott, "monogamous households were a tiny, tiny portion" of the world population, found in "just Western Europe and little settlements in...
The marriage records of Western and Eastern Europe in the early 20th century illustrate this pattern vividly; west of the Hajnal line, only 25% of women aged 20–24 were married while to the east of the line, over 75% of women in this age group were married and less than five percent of women remained unmarried.
Mar 14, 2012 · 6. State control. The Clandestine Marriage Act of 1753, popularly known as Lord Hardwicke's Act, marked the beginning of state involvement in marriage, says sociologist Carol Smart of the ...