Marriage, also called matrimony or wedlock, is a socially or ritually recognised union between spouses
that establishes rights and obligations between those spouses, as well
as between them and any resulting biological or adopted children and affinity (in-laws and other family through marriage).
The definition of marriage varies around the world not only between
cultures and between religions, but also throughout the history of any
given culture and religion, evolving to both expand and constrict in who
and what is encompassed, but typically it is principally an institution in which interpersonal relationships, usually sexual, are acknowledged or sanctioned. In some cultures, marriage is recommended or considered to be compulsory before pursuing any sexual activity. When defined broadly, marriage is considered a cultural universal. A marriage ceremony is known as a wedding.
Individuals may marry for several reasons, including legal, social, libidinal, emotional, financial, spiritual, and religious purposes. Whom they marry may be influenced by gender, socially determined rules of incest, prescriptive marriage rules, parental choice and individual desire. In some areas of the world, arranged marriage, child marriage, polygamy, and sometimes forced marriage,
may be practiced as a cultural tradition. Conversely, such practices
may be outlawed and penalized in parts of the world out of concerns of
the infringement of women's rights, or the infringement of children's
rights (both female and male children), and because of international
law. Around the world, primarily in developed democracies, there has been a general trend towards ensuring equal rights within marriage for women and legally recognizing the marriages of interfaith, interracial, and same-sex couples. These trends coincide with the broader human rights movement.
Marriage can be recognized by a state, an organization, a religious authority, a tribal group, a local community, or peers. It is often viewed as a contract. When a marriage is performed and carried out by a government institution in accordance with the marriage laws of the jurisdiction, without religious content, it is a civil marriage.
Civil marriage recognizes and creates the rights and obligations
intrinsic to matrimony before the state. When a marriage is performed
with religious content under the auspices of a religious institution it
is a religious marriage. Religious marriage recognizes and creates the
rights and obligations intrinsic to matrimony before that religion.
Religious marriage is known variously as sacramental marriage in Catholicism, nikah in Islam, nissuin in Judaism,
and various other names in other faith traditions, each with their own
constraints as to what constitutes, and who can enter into, a valid
religious marriage.
Some countries do not recognize locally performed religious
marriage on its own, and require a separate civil marriage for official
purposes. Conversely, civil marriage does not exist in some countries
governed by a religious legal system, such as Saudi Arabia, where marriages contracted abroad might not be recognized if they were contracted contrary to Saudi interpretations of Islamic religious law. In countries governed by a mixed secular-religious legal system, such as in Lebanon and Israel,
locally performed civil marriage also does not exist within the
country, preventing interfaith and various other marriages contradicting
religious laws from being entered into in the country, however, civil
marriages performed abroad are recognized by the state even if they
conflict with religious laws (in the case of recognition of marriage in Israel,
this includes recognition of not only interfaith civil marriages
performed abroad, but also overseas same-sex civil marriages).
The act of marriage usually creates normative
or legal obligations between the individuals involved, and any
offspring they may produce or adopt. In terms of legal recognition, most
sovereign states and other jurisdictions limit marriage to opposite-sex couples and a diminishing number of these permit polygyny, child marriages, and forced marriages.
In modern times, a growing number of countries, primarily developed
democracies, have lifted bans on and have established legal recognition
for the marriages of interfaith, interracial, and same-sex couples. Some cultures allow the dissolution of marriage through divorce or annulment. In some areas, child marriages and polygamy may occur in spite of national laws against the practice.
Since the late twentieth century, major social changes in Western
countries have led to changes in the demographics of marriage, with the
age of first marriage increasing, fewer people marrying, and more
couples choosing to cohabit rather than marry. For example, the number of marriages in Europe decreased by 30% from 1975 to 2005.
Historically, in most cultures, married women had very few rights
of their own, being considered, along with the family's children, the
property of the husband; as such, they could not own or inherit property, or represent themselves legally (see for example coverture). In Europe, the United States, and other places in the developed world,
beginning in the late 19th century and lasting through the 21st
century, marriage has undergone gradual legal changes, aimed at
improving the rights of the wife. These changes included giving wives
legal identities of their own, abolishing the right of husbands to
physically discipline their wives, giving wives property rights,
liberalizing divorce laws, providing wives with reproductive rights of their own, and requiring a wife's consent when sexual relations occur. These changes have occurred primarily in Western countries.
In the 21st century, there continue to be controversies regarding the
legal status of married women, legal acceptance of or leniency towards
violence within marriage (especially sexual violence), traditional
marriage customs such as dowry and bride price, forced marriage, marriageable age, and criminalization of consensual behaviors such as premarital and extramarital sex.
Etymology
The word "marriage" derives from Middle English mariage, which first appears in 1250–1300 CE. This in turn is derived from Old French, marier (to marry), and ultimately Latin, marītāre, meaning to provide with a husband or wife and marītāri meaning to get married. The adjective marīt-us -a, -um
meaning matrimonial or nuptial could also be used in the masculine form
as a noun for "husband" and in the feminine form for "wife". The related word "matrimony" derives from the Old French word matremoine, which appears around 1300 CE and ultimately derives from Latin mātrimōnium, which combines the two concepts: mater meaning "mother" and the suffix -monium signifying "action, state, or condition".
Definitions
Anthropologists
have proposed several competing definitions of marriage in an attempt
to encompass the wide variety of marital practices observed across
cultures. Even within Western culture, "definitions of marriage have careened from one extreme to another and everywhere in between" (as Evan Gerstmann has put it).
Relation recognized by custom or law
In The History of Human Marriage (1922), Edvard Westermarck
defined marriage as "a more or less durable connection between male and
female lasting beyond the mere act of propagation till after the birth
of the offspring." In The Future of Marriage in Western Civilization
(1936), he rejected his earlier definition, instead provisionally
defining marriage as "a relation of one or more men to one or more women
that is recognized by custom or law".
Legitimacy of offspring
The anthropological handbook Notes and Queries (1951) defined
marriage as "a union between a man and a woman such that children born
to the woman are the recognized legitimate offspring of both partners." In recognition of a practice by the Nuer people of Sudan allowing women to act as a husband in certain circumstances (the ghost marriage), Kathleen Gough suggested modifying this to "a woman and one or more other persons."
In an analysis of marriage among the Nayar, a polyandrous society
in India, Gough found that the group lacked a husband role in the
conventional sense; that unitary role in the west was divided between a
non-resident "social father" of the woman's children, and her lovers who
were the actual procreators. None of these men had legal rights to the
woman's child. This forced Gough to disregard sexual access as a key
element of marriage and to define it in terms of legitimacy of offspring
alone: marriage is "a relationship established between a woman and one
or more other persons, which provides a child born to the woman under
circumstances not prohibited by the rules of relationship, is accorded
full birth-status rights common to normal members of his society or
social stratum."
Economic anthropologist Duran Bell
has criticized the legitimacy-based definition on the basis that some
societies do not require marriage for legitimacy. He argued that a
legitimacy-based definition of marriage is circular in societies where
illegitimacy has no other legal or social implications for a child other
than the mother being unmarried.
Collection of rights
Edmund Leach
criticized Gough's definition for being too restrictive in terms of
recognized legitimate offspring and suggested that marriage be viewed in
terms of the different types of rights it serves to establish. In 1955
article in Man,
Leach argued that no one definition of marriage applied to all
cultures. He offered a list of ten rights associated with marriage,
including sexual monopoly and rights with respect to children, with
specific rights differing across cultures. Those rights, according to
Leach, included:
- "To establish a legal father of a woman's children.
- To establish a legal mother of a man's children.
- To give the husband a monopoly in the wife's sexuality.
- To give the wife a monopoly in the husband's sexuality.
- To give the husband partial or monopolistic rights to the wife's domestic and other labour services.
- To give the wife partial or monopolistic rights to the husband's domestic and other labour services.
- To give the husband partial or total control over property belonging or potentially accruing to the wife.
- To give the wife partial or total control over property belonging or potentially accruing to the husband.
- To establish a joint fund of property – a partnership – for the benefit of the children of the marriage.
- To establish a socially significant 'relationship of affinity' between the husband and his wife's brothers."
Right of sexual access
In a 1997 article in Current Anthropology, Duran Bell
describes marriage as "a relationship between one or more men (male or
female) in severalty to one or more women that provides those men with a
demand-right of sexual access within a domestic group and identifies
women who bear the obligation of yielding to the demands of those
specific men." In referring to "men in severalty", Bell is referring to
corporate kin groups such as lineages which, in having paid brideprice,
retain a right in a woman's offspring even if her husband (a lineage
member) deceases (Levirate marriage).
In referring to "men (male or female)", Bell is referring to women
within the lineage who may stand in as the "social fathers" of the
wife's children born of other lovers. (See Nuer "ghost marriage")
Types of marriage
Monogamy
Monogamy is a form of marriage in which an individual has only one
spouse during their lifetime or at any one time (serial monogamy).
Anthropologist Jack Goody's comparative study of marriage around the world utilizing the Ethnographic Atlas
found a strong correlation between intensive plough agriculture, dowry
and monogamy. This pattern was found in a broad swath of Eurasian
societies from Japan to Ireland. The majority of Sub-Saharan African
societies that practice extensive hoe agriculture, in contrast, show a
correlation between "bride price" and polygamy.
A further study drawing on the Ethnographic Atlas showed a statistical
correlation between increasing size of the society, the belief in "high
gods" to support human morality, and monogamy.
In the countries which do not permit polygamy, a person who
marries in one of those countries a person while still being lawfully
married to another commits the crime of bigamy.
In all cases, the second marriage is considered legally null and void.
Besides the second and subsequent marriages being void, the bigamist is
also liable to other penalties, which also vary between jurisdictions.
Serial monogamy
Governments that support monogamy may allow easy divorce. In a number
of Western countries divorce rates approach 50%. Those who remarry do
so on average three times. Divorce and remarriage can thus result in
"serial monogamy", i.e. having multiple marriages but only one legal
spouse at a time. This can be interpreted as a form of plural mating, as
are those societies dominated by female-headed families in the Caribbean, Mauritius and Brazil where there is frequent rotation of unmarried partners. In all, these account for 16 to 24% of the "monogamous" category.
Serial monogamy creates a new kind of relative, the "ex-". The
"ex-wife", for example, remains an active part of her "ex-husband's" or
"ex-wife's" life, as they may be tied together by transfers of resources
(alimony, child support), or shared child custody. Bob Simpson notes
that in the British case, serial monogamy creates an "extended family" –
a number of households tied together in this way, including mobile
children (possible exes may include an ex-wife, an ex-brother-in-law,
etc., but not an "ex-child"). These "unclear families" do not fit the
mould of the monogamous nuclear family.
As a series of connected households, they come to resemble the
polygynous model of separate households maintained by mothers with
children, tied by a male to whom they are married or divorced.
Polygamy
Polygamy is a marriage which includes more than two partners. When a man is married to more than one wife at a time, the relationship is called polygyny, and there is no marriage bond between the wives; and when a woman is married to more than one husband at a time, it is called polyandry, and there is no marriage bond between the husbands. If a marriage includes multiple husbands or wives, it can be called group marriage.
A molecular genetic study of global human genetic diversity
argued that sexual polygyny was typical of human reproductive patterns
until the shift to sedentary farming communities approximately 10,000 to
5,000 years ago in Europe and Asia, and more recently in Africa and the
Americas. As noted above, Anthropologist Jack Goody's comparative study of marriage around the world utilizing the Ethnographic Atlas found that the majority of Sub-Saharan African societies that practice extensive hoe agriculture show a correlation between "Bride price" and polygamy.
A survey of other cross-cultural samples has confirmed that the absence
of the plough was the only predictor of polygamy, although other
factors such as high male mortality in warfare (in non-state societies)
and pathogen stress (in state societies) had some impact.
Marriages are classified according to the number of legal spouses
an individual has. The suffix "-gamy" refers specifically to the number
of spouses, as in bi-gamy (two spouses, generally illegal in most nations), and poly-gamy (more than one spouse).
Societies show variable acceptance of polygamy as a cultural ideal and practice. According to the Ethnographic Atlas,
of 1,231 societies noted, 186 were monogamous; 453 had occasional
polygyny; 588 had more frequent polygyny; and 4 had polyandry.
However, as Miriam Zeitzen writes, social tolerance for polygamy is
different from the practice of polygamy, since it requires wealth to
establish multiple households for multiple wives. The actual practice of
polygamy in a tolerant society may actually be low, with the majority
of aspirant polygamists practicing monogamous marriage. Tracking the
occurrence of polygamy is further complicated in jurisdictions where it
has been banned, but continues to be practiced (de facto polygamy).
Zeitzen also notes that Western perceptions of African society
and marriage patterns are biased by "contradictory concerns of nostalgia
for traditional African culture versus critique of polygamy as
oppressive to women or detrimental to development."
Polygamy has been condemned as being a form of human rights abuse, with
concerns arising over domestic abuse, forced marriage, and neglect. The
vast majority of the world's countries, including virtually all of the
world's developed nations, do not permit polygamy. There have been calls
for the abolition of polygamy in developing countries.
Polygyny
Polygyny usually grants wives equal status, although the husband may
have personal preferences. One type of de facto polygyny is concubinage, where only one woman gets a wife's rights and status, while other women remain legal house mistresses.
Although a society may be classified as polygynous, not all
marriages in it necessarily are; monogamous marriages may in fact
predominate. It is to this flexibility that Anthropologist Robin Fox
attributes its success as a social support system: "This has often
meant – given the imbalance in the sex ratios, the higher male infant
mortality, the shorter life span of males, the loss of males in wartime,
etc. – that often women were left without financial support from
husbands. To correct this condition, females had to be killed at birth,
remain single, become prostitutes, or be siphoned off into celibate
religious orders. Polygynous systems have the advantage that they can
promise, as did the Mormons, a home and family for every woman."
Nonetheless, polygyny is a gender issue which offers men
asymmetrical benefits. In some cases, there is a large age discrepancy
(as much as a generation) between a man and his youngest wife,
compounding the power differential between the two. Tensions not only
exist between genders, but also within genders; senior and
junior men compete for wives, and senior and junior wives in the same
household may experience radically different life conditions, and
internal hierarchy. Several studies have suggested that the wive's
relationship with other women, including co-wives and husband's female
kin, are more critical relationships than that with her husband for her
productive, reproductive and personal achievement. In some societies, the co-wives are relatives, usually sisters, a practice called sororal polygyny; the pre-existing relationship between the co-wives is thought to decrease potential tensions within the marriage.
Fox argues that "the major difference between polygyny and
monogamy could be stated thus: while plural mating occurs in both
systems, under polygyny several unions may be recognized as being legal
marriages while under monogamy only one of the unions is so recognized.
Often, however, it is difficult to draw a hard and fast line between the
two."
As polygamy in Africa is increasingly subject to legal limitations, a variant form of de facto (as opposed to legal or de jure)
polygyny is being practised in urban centres. Although it does not
involve multiple (now illegal) formal marriages, the domestic and
personal arrangements follow old polygynous patterns. The de facto form
of polygyny is found in other parts of the world as well (including some
Mormon sects and Muslim families in the United States).
In some societies such as the Lovedu of South Africa, or the Nuer
of the Sudan, aristocratic women may become female 'husbands.' In the
Lovedu case, this female husband may take a number of polygamous wives.
This is not a lesbian relationship, but a means of legitimately
expanding a royal lineage by attaching these wives' children to it. The
relationships are considered polygynous, not polyandrous, because the
female husband is in fact assuming masculine gendered political roles.
Religious groups have differing views on the legitimacy of polygyny. It is allowed in Islam and Confucianism. Judaism and Christianity
have mentioned practices involving polygyny in the past, however,
outright religious acceptance of such practices was not addressed until
its rejection in later passages. They do explicitly prohibit polygyny
today.
Polyandry
Polyandry is notably more rare than polygyny, though less rare than the figure commonly cited in the Ethnographic Atlas
(1980) which listed only those polyandrous societies found in the
Himalayan Mountains. More recent studies have found 53 societies outside
the 28 found in the Himalayans which practice polyandry. It is most common in egalitarian societies marked by high male mortality or male absenteeism. It is associated with partible paternity, the cultural belief that a child can have more than one father.
The explanation for polyandry in the Himalayan Mountains is
related to the scarcity of land; the marriage of all brothers in a
family to the same wife (fraternal polyandry) allows family land
to remain intact and undivided. If every brother married separately and
had children, family land would be split into unsustainable small plots.
In Europe, this was prevented through the social practice of impartible
inheritance (the dis-inheriting of most siblings, some of whom went on
to become celibate monks and priests).
Plural marriage
Group marriage (also known as multi-lateral marriage) is a form of polyamory in which more than two persons form a family
unit, with all the members of the group marriage being considered to be
married to all the other members of the group marriage, and all members
of the marriage share parental responsibility for any children arising from the marriage.
No country legally condones group marriages, neither under the law nor
as a common law marriage, but historically it has been practiced by some
cultures of Polynesia, Asia, Papua New Guinea and the Americas – as
well as in some intentional communities and alternative subcultures such as the Oneida Perfectionists in up-state New York. Of the 250 societies reported by the American anthropologist George Murdock in 1949, only the Kaingang of Brazil had any group marriages at all.
Child marriage
A child marriage is a marriage where one or both spouses are under the age of 18. It is related to child betrothal and teenage pregnancy.
Child marriage was common throughout history, even up until the 1900s in the United States, where in 1880 CE, in the state of Delaware, the age of consent for marriage was 7 years old.
Still, in 2017, over half of the 50 United States have no explicit
minimum age to marry and several states set the age as low as 14. Today it is condemned by international human rights organizations. Child marriages are often arranged between the families of the future bride and groom, sometimes as soon as the girl is born. However, in the late 1800s in England and the United States, feminist activists began calling for raised age of consent laws, which was eventually handled in the 1920s, having been raised to 16-18.
Child marriages can also occur in the context of bride kidnapping.
In the year 1552 CE, John Somerford and Jane Somerford Brereton
were both married at the ages of 3 and 2, respectively. Twelve years
later, in 1564, John filed for divorce.
While child marriage is observed for both boys and girls, the overwhelming majority of child spouses are girls. In many cases, only one marriage-partner is a child, usually the female, due to the importance placed upon female virginity. Causes of child marriage include poverty, bride price, dowry, laws that allow child marriages, religious and social pressures, regional customs, fear of remaining unmarried, and perceived inability of women to work for money.
Today, child marriages are widespread in parts of the world; being most common in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, with more than half of the girls in some countries in those regions being married before 18.
The incidence of child marriage has been falling in most parts of the
world. In developed countries child marriage is outlawed or restricted.
Girls who marry before 18 are at greater risk of becoming victims of domestic violence, than those who marry later, especially when they are married to a much older man.
Same-sex and third-gender marriages
As noted above, several kinds of same-sex, non-sexual marriages exist
in some lineage-based societies. This section relates to same-sex
sexual unions. Some cultures include third gender (two-spirit or transgender) individuals, such as the berdache of the Zuni in New Mexico. We'wha,
one of the most revered Zuni elders (an Ihamana, spiritual leader)
served as an emissary of the Zuni to Washington, where he met President Grover Cleveland. We'wha had a husband who was generally recognized as such.
While it is a relatively new practice to grant same-sex couples
the same form of legal marital recognition as commonly granted to
mixed-sex couples, there is some history of recorded same-sex unions
around the world. Ancient Greek same-sex relationships
were like modern companionate marriages, unlike their different-sex
marriages in which the spouses had few emotional ties, and the husband
had freedom to engage in outside sexual liaisons. The Codex Theodosianus (C. Th. 9.7.3) issued in 438 CE imposed severe penalties or death on same-sex relationships,
but the exact intent of the law and its relation to social practice is
unclear, as only a few examples of same-sex relationships in that
culture exist. Same-sex unions were celebrated in some regions of China, such as Fujian. Possibly the earliest documented same-sex wedding in Latin Christendom occurred in Rome, Italy, at the San Giovanni a Porta Latina basilica in 1581.
Temporary marriages
Several cultures have practiced temporary and conditional marriages. Examples include the Celtic practice of handfasting
and fixed-term marriages in the Muslim community. Pre-Islamic Arabs
practiced a form of temporary marriage that carries on today in the
practice of Nikah mut‘ah, a fixed-term marriage contract. The Islamic prophet Muhammad sanctioned a temporary marriage – sigheh in Iran and muta'a in Iraq – which can provide a legitimizing cover for sex workers. The same forms of temporary marriage have been used in Egypt, Lebanon and Iran to make the donation of a human ova legal for in vitro fertilisation; a woman cannot, however, use this kind of marriage to obtain a sperm donation. Muslim controversies related to Nikah Mut'ah have resulted in the practice being confined mostly to Shi'ite communities. The matrilineal Mosuo of China practice what they call "walking marriage".
Cohabitation
In some jurisdictions cohabitation, in certain circumstances, may constitute a common-law marriage, an unregistered partnership,
or otherwise provide the unmarried partners with various rights and
responsibilities; and in some countries the laws recognize cohabitation
in lieu of institutional marriage for taxation and social security
benefits. This is the case, for example, in Australia.
Cohabitation may be an option pursued as a form of resistance to
traditional institutionalized marriage. However, in this context, some
nations reserve the right to define the relationship as marital, or
otherwise to regulate the relation, even if the relation has not been
registered with the state or a religious institution.
Conversely, institutionalized marriages may not involve
cohabitation. In some cases couples living together do not wish to be
recognized as married. This may occur because pension or alimony rights
are adversely affected; because of taxation considerations; because of
immigration issues, or for other reasons. Such marriages have also been
increasingly common in Beijing. Guo Jianmei, director of the center for women's studies at Beijing University, told a Newsday
correspondent, "Walking marriages reflect sweeping changes in Chinese
society." A "walking marriage" refers to a type of temporary marriage
formed by the Mosuo of China, in which male partners live elsewhere and make nightly visits. A similar arrangement in Saudi Arabia, called misyar marriage, also involves the husband and wife living separately but meeting regularly.
Partner selection
There is wide cross-cultural variation in the social rules governing
the selection of a partner for marriage. There is variation in the
degree to which partner selection is an individual decision by the
partners or a collective decision by the partners' kin groups, and there
is variation in the rules regulating which partners are valid choices.
The United Nations World Fertility Report of 2003 reports that 89% of all people get married before age forty-nine.
The percent of women and men who marry before age forty-nine drops to
nearly 50% in some nations and reaches near 100% in other nations.
In other cultures with less strict rules governing the groups
from which a partner can be chosen the selection of a marriage partner
may involve either the couple going through a selection process of courtship or the marriage may be arranged by the couple's parents or an outside party, a matchmaker.
Social status
Some people want to marry a person with higher or lower status than
them. Others want to marry people who have similar status. In many
societies women marry men who are of higher social status.
There are marriages where each party has sought a partner of similar
status. There are other marriages in which the man is older than the
woman.
The incest taboo, exogamy and endogamy
Societies have often placed restrictions on marriage to relatives,
though the degree of prohibited relationship varies widely. Marriages
between parents and children, or between full siblings, with few
exceptions, have been considered incest and forbidden. However, marriages between more distant relatives
have been much more common, with one estimate being that 80% of all
marriages in history have been between second cousins or closer.
This proportion has fallen dramatically, but still more than 10% of all
marriages are believed to be between people who are second cousins or
more closely related.
In the United States, such marriages are now highly stigmatized, and
laws ban most or all first-cousin marriage in 30 states. Specifics vary:
in South Korea, historically it was illegal to marry someone with the
same last name and same ancestral line.
An Avunculate marriage
is a marriage that occurs between an uncle and his niece or between an
aunt and her nephew. Such marriages are illegal in most countries due to
incest restrictions. However, a small number of countries have
legalized it, including Argentina, Australia, Austria, Malaysia, and Russia.
In various societies the choice of partner is often limited to
suitable persons from specific social groups. In some societies the rule
is that a partner is selected from an individual's own social group – endogamy,
this is often the case in class- and caste-based societies. But in
other societies a partner must be chosen from a different group than
one's own – exogamy, this may be the case in societies practicing totemic religion where society is divided into several exogamous totemic clans, such as most Aboriginal Australian societies. In other societies a person is expected to marry their cross-cousin,
a woman must marry her father's sister's son and a man must marry his
mother's brother's daughter – this is often the case if either a society
has a rule of tracing kinship exclusively through patrilineal or
matrilineal descent groups as among the Akan people of West Africa. Another kind of marriage selection is the levirate marriage
in which widows are obligated to marry their husband's brother, mostly
found in societies where kinship is based on endogamous clan groups.
Religion has commonly weighed in on the matter of which relatives, if any, are allowed to marry. Relations may be by consanguinity or affinity, meaning by blood or by marriage. On the marriage of cousins, Catholic
policy has evolved from initial acceptance, through a long period of
general prohibition, to the contemporary requirement for a dispensation. Islam has always allowed it, while Hindu texts vary widely.
Prescriptive marriage
In a wide array of lineage-based societies with a classificatory kinship system,
potential spouses are sought from a specific class of relative as
determined by a prescriptive marriage rule. This rule may be expressed
by anthropologists using a "descriptive" kinship term, such as a "man's
mother's brother's daughter" (also known as a "cross-cousin"). Such
descriptive rules mask the participant's perspective: a man should marry
a woman from his mother's lineage. Within the society's kinship
terminology, such relatives are usually indicated by a specific term
which sets them apart as potentially marriageable. Pierre Bourdieu
notes, however, that very few marriages ever follow the rule, and that
when they do so, it is for "practical kinship" reasons such as the
preservation of family property, rather than the "official kinship"
ideology.
Insofar as regular marriages following prescriptive rules occur,
lineages are linked together in fixed relationships; these ties between
lineages may form political alliances in kinship dominated societies. French structural anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss developed alliance theory to account for the "elementary" kinship structures created by the limited number of prescriptive marriage rules possible.
A pragmatic (or 'arranged') marriage is made easier by formal
procedures of family or group politics. A responsible authority sets up
or encourages the marriage; they may, indeed, engage a professional matchmaker
to find a suitable spouse for an unmarried person. The authority figure
could be parents, family, a religious official, or a group consensus.
In some cases, the authority figure may choose a match for purposes
other than marital harmony.
Forced marriage
A forced marriage is a marriage in which one or both of the parties
is married against their will. Forced marriages continue to be practiced
in parts of the world, especially in South Asia and Africa.
The line between forced marriage and consensual marriage may become
blurred, because the social norms of these cultures dictate that one
should never oppose the desire of one's parents/relatives in regard to
the choice of a spouse; in such cultures it is not necessary for
violence, threats, intimidation etc. to occur, the person simply
"consents" to the marriage even if he/she doesn't want it, out of the
implied social pressure and duty. The customs of bride price and dowry, that exist in parts of the world, can lead to buying and selling people into marriage.
In some societies, ranging from Central Asia to the Caucasus to Africa, the custom of bride kidnapping still exists, in which a woman is captured by a man and his friends. Sometimes this covers an elopement, but sometimes it depends on sexual violence. In previous times, raptio
was a larger-scale version of this, with groups of women captured by
groups of men, sometimes in war; the most famous example is The Rape of the Sabine Women, which provided the first citizens of Rome with their wives.
Other marriage partners are more or less imposed on an individual. For example, widow inheritance provides a widow with another man from her late husband's brothers.
In rural areas of India, child marriage is practiced, with parents often arranging the wedding, sometimes even before the child is born. This practice was made illegal under the Child Marriage Restraint Act of 1929.
Economic considerations
The financial aspects of marriage vary between cultures and have changed over time.
In some cultures, dowries and bridewealth continue to be required
today. In both cases, the financial arrangements are usually made
between the groom (or his family) and the bride's family; with the bride
often not being involved in the negotiations, and often not having a
choice in whether to participate in the marriage.
In Early modern Britain,
the social status of the couple was supposed to be equal. After the
marriage, all the property (called "fortune") and expected inheritances
of the wife belonged to the husband.
Dowry
A dowry is "a process whereby parental property is distributed to a daughter at her marriage (i.e. inter vivos) rather than at the holder's death (mortis causa)…
A dowry establishes some variety of conjugal fund, the nature of which
may vary widely. This fund ensures her support (or endowment) in
widowhood and eventually goes to provide for her sons and daughters."
In some cultures, especially in countries such as Turkey, India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Morocco, Nepal, dowries continue to be expected. In India, thousands of dowry-related deaths have taken place on yearly basis, to counter this problem, several jurisdictions have enacted laws restricting or banning dowry. In Nepal, dowry was made illegal in 2009.
Some authors believe that the giving and receiving of dowry reflects
the status and even the effort to climb high in social hierarchy.
Dower
Direct Dowry contrasts with bridewealth, which is paid by the groom or his family to the bride's parents, and with indirect dowry (or dower),
which is property given to the bride herself by the groom at the time
of marriage and which remains under her ownership and control.
In the Jewish tradition, the rabbis in ancient times insisted on the marriage couple entering into a prenuptial agreement, called a ketubah. Besides other things, the ketubah provided for an amount to be paid by the husband in the event of a divorce or his estate in the event of his death. This amount was a replacement of the biblical dower or bride price, which was payable at the time of the marriage by the groom to the father of the bride.
This innovation was put in place because the biblical bride price
created a major social problem: many young prospective husbands could
not raise the bride price at the time when they would normally be
expected to marry. So, to enable these young men to marry, the rabbis,
in effect, delayed the time that the amount would be payable, when they
would be more likely to have the sum. It may also be noted that both the
dower and the ketubah amounts served the same purpose: the
protection for the wife should her support cease, either by death or
divorce. The only difference between the two systems was the timing of
the payment. It is the predecessor to the wife's present-day entitlement
to maintenance
in the event of the breakup of marriage, and family maintenance in the
event of the husband not providing adequately for the wife in his will. Another function performed by the ketubah
amount was to provide a disincentive for the husband contemplating
divorcing his wife: he would need to have the amount to be able to pay
to the wife.
Morning gifts,
which might also be arranged by the bride's father rather than the
bride, are given to the bride herself; the name derives from the
Germanic tribal custom of giving them the morning after the wedding
night. She might have control of this morning gift during the lifetime
of her husband, but is entitled to it when widowed. If the amount of her
inheritance is settled by law rather than agreement, it may be called dower.
Depending on legal systems and the exact arrangement, she may not be
entitled to dispose of it after her death, and may lose the property if
she remarries. Morning gifts were preserved for centuries in morganatic marriage,
a union where the wife's inferior social status was held to prohibit
her children from inheriting a noble's titles or estates. In this case,
the morning gift would support the wife and children. Another legal
provision for widowhood was jointure,
in which property, often land, would be held in joint tenancy, so that
it would automatically go to the widow on her husband's death.
Islamic tradition has similar practices. A 'mahr',
either immediate or deferred, is the woman's portion of the groom's
wealth (divorce) or estate (death). These amounts are usually set on the
basis of the groom's own and family wealth and incomes, but in some
parts these are set very high so as to provide a disincentive for the
groom exercising the divorce, or the husband's family 'inheriting' a
large portion of the estate, especially if there are no male offspring
from the marriage. In some countries, including Iran, the mahr
or alimony can amount to more than a man can ever hope to earn,
sometimes up to US$1,000,000 (4000 official Iranian gold coins). If the
husband cannot pay the mahr,
either in case of a divorce or on demand, according to the current laws
in Iran, he will have to pay it by installments. Failure to pay the mahr might even lead to imprisonment.
Bridewealth
Bridewealth is a common practice in parts of Southeast Asia (Thailand, Cambodia), parts of Central Asia, and in much of sub-Saharan Africa.
It is also known as brideprice although this has fallen in disfavor as
it implies the purchase of the bride. Bridewealth is the amount of money or property or wealth paid by the groom or his family to the parents of a woman upon the marriage of their daughter to the groom. In anthropological
literature, bride price has often been explained as payment made to
compensate the bride's family for the loss of her labor and fertility.
In some cases, bridewealth is a means by which the groom's family's ties
to the children of the union are recognized.
Taxation
In some countries a married person or couple benefits from various
taxation advantages not available to a single person. For example,
spouses may be allowed to average their combined incomes. This is advantageous to a married couple with disparate incomes. To compensate for this, countries may provide a higher tax bracket
for the averaged income of a married couple. While income averaging
might still benefit a married couple with a stay-at-home spouse, such
averaging would cause a married couple with roughly equal personal
incomes to pay more total tax than they would as two single persons. In
the United States, this is called the marriage penalty.
When the rates applied by the tax code are not based income averaging, but rather on the sum
of individuals' incomes, higher rates will usually apply to each
individual in a two-earner households in a progressive tax systems. This
is most often the case with high-income taxpayers and is another
situation called a marriage penalty.
Conversely, when progressive tax is levied on the individual with
no consideration for the partnership, dual-income couples fare much
better than single-income couples with similar household incomes. The
effect can be increased when the welfare system treats the same income
as a shared income thereby denying welfare access to the non-earning
spouse. Such systems apply in Australia and Canada, for example.
Post-marital residence
In many Western cultures, marriage usually leads to the formation of a
new household comprising the married couple, with the married couple
living together in the same home, often sharing the same bed, but in
some other cultures this is not the tradition. Among the Minangkabau of West Sumatra, residency after marriage is matrilocal, with the husband moving into the household of his wife's mother. Residency after marriage can also be patrilocal or avunculocal. In these cases, married couples may not form an independent household, but remain part of an extended family household.
Early theories explaining the determinants of postmarital residence connected it with the sexual division of labor. However, to date, cross-cultural tests of this hypothesis using worldwide samples have failed to find any significant relationship between these two variables. However, Korotayev's
tests show that the female contribution to subsistence does correlate
significantly with matrilocal residence in general. However, this
correlation is masked by a general polygyny factor.
Although, in different-sex marriages, an increase in the female
contribution to subsistence tends to lead to matrilocal residence, it
also tends simultaneously to lead to general non-sororal polygyny which effectively destroys matrilocality. If this polygyny factor is controlled (e.g., through a multiple regression
model), division of labor turns out to be a significant predictor of
postmarital residence. Thus, Murdock's hypotheses regarding the
relationships between the sexual division of labor and postmarital
residence were basically correct, though the actual relationships between those two groups of variables are more complicated than he expected.
There has been a trend toward the neolocal residence in western societies.
Marriage law
Marriage laws refer to the legal requirements which determine the
validity of a marriage, which vary considerably between countries.
Rights and obligations
A marriage bestows rights and obligations on the married parties, and sometimes on relatives as well, being the sole mechanism for the creation of affinal ties (in-laws). These may include, depending on jurisdiction:
- Giving one spouse or his/her family control over the other spouse's sexual services, labor, and property.
- Giving one spouse responsibility for the other's debts.
- Giving one spouse visitation rights when the other is incarcerated or hospitalized.
- Giving one spouse control over the other's affairs when the other is incapacitated.
- Establishing the second legal guardian of a parent's child.
- Establishing a joint fund of property for the benefit of children.
- Establishing a relationship between the families of the spouses.
These rights and obligations vary considerably between societies, and between groups within society. These might include arranged marriages, family obligations, the legal establishment of a nuclear family unit, the legal protection of children and public declaration of commitment.
Property regime
In many countries today, each marriage partner has the choice of keeping his or her property separate or combining properties. In the latter case, called community property, when the marriage ends by divorce each owns half. In lieu of a will or trust, property owned by the deceased generally is inherited by the surviving spouse.
In some legal systems, the partners in a marriage are "jointly
liable" for the debts of the marriage. This has a basis in a traditional
legal notion called the "Doctrine of Necessities" whereby, in a
heterosexual marriage, a husband was responsible to provide necessary
things for his wife. Where this is the case, one partner may be sued to
collect a debt for which they did not expressly contract. Critics of
this practice note that debt collection agencies can abuse this by
claiming an unreasonably wide range of debts to be expenses of the
marriage. The cost of defense and the burden of proof is then placed on
the non-contracting party to prove that the expense is not a debt of the
family. The respective maintenance obligations, both during and
eventually after a marriage, are regulated in most jurisdictions; alimony is one such method.
Marriage restrictions
Marriage is an institution that is historically filled with restrictions. From age, to race, to social status, to consanguinity,
to gender, restrictions are placed on marriage by society for reasons
of benefiting the children, passing on healthy genes, maintaining
cultural values, or because of prejudice and fear. Almost all cultures that recognize marriage also recognize adultery as a violation of the terms of marriage.
Age
Most jurisdictions set a minimum age for marriage,
that is, a person must attain a certain age to be legally allowed to
marry. This age may depend on circumstances, for instance exceptions
from the general rule may be permitted if the parents of a young person
express their consent and/or if a court decides that said marriage is in
the best interest of the young person (often this applies in cases
where a girl is pregnant). Although most age restrictions are in place
in order to prevent children from being forced into marriages,
especially to much older partners – marriages which can have negative
education and health related consequences, and lead to child sexual abuse and other forms of violence – such child marriages remain common in parts of the world. According to the UN, child marriages are most common in rural sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. The ten countries with the highest rates of child marriage are: Niger (75%), Chad, Central African Republic, Bangladesh, Guinea, Mozambique, Mali, Burkina Faso, South Sudan, and Malawi.
Kinship
To prohibit incest and eugenic reasons, marriage laws have set
restrictions for relatives to marry. Direct blood relatives are usually
prohibited to marry, while for branch line relatives, laws are wary.
Race
Laws banning "race-mixing" were enforced in certain North American jurisdictions from 1691 until 1967, in Nazi Germany (The Nuremberg Laws) from 1935 until 1945, and in South Africa during most part of the Apartheid
era (1949–1985). All these laws primarily banned marriage between
persons of different racially or ethnically defined groups, which was
termed "amalgamation" or "miscegenation" in the U.S. The laws in Nazi
Germany and many of the U.S. states, as well as South Africa, also
banned sexual relations between such individuals.
In the United States, laws in some but not all of the states
prohibited the marriage of whites and blacks, and in many states also
the intermarriage of whites with Native Americans or Asians. In the U.S., such laws were known as anti-miscegenation laws. From 1913 until 1948, 30 out of the then 48 states enforced such laws. Although an "Anti-Miscegenation Amendment" to the United States Constitution was proposed in 1871, in 1912–1913, and in 1928, no nationwide law against racially mixed marriages was ever enacted. In 1967, the Supreme Court of the United States unanimously ruled in Loving v. Virginia that anti-miscegenation laws are unconstitutional. With this ruling, these laws were no longer in effect in the remaining 16 states that still had them.
The Nazi ban on interracial marriage and interracial sex was enacted in September 1935 as part of the Nuremberg Laws, the Gesetz zum Schutze des deutschen Blutes und der deutschen Ehre (The Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honour). The Nuremberg Laws classified Jews
as a race and forbade marriage and extramarital sexual relations at
first with people of Jewish descent, but was later ended to the
"Gypsies, Negroes or their bastard offspring" and people of "German or
related blood". Such relations were marked as Rassenschande
(lit. "race-disgrace") and could be punished by imprisonment (usually
followed by deportation to a concentration camp) and even by death.
South Africa under apartheid also banned interracial marriage. The Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act, 1949 prohibited marriage between persons of different races, and the Immorality Act of 1950 made sexual relations with a person of a different race a crime.
Sex/gender
As of 2018, same-sex marriage is performed and recognized by law (nationwide or in some parts) in the following countries: Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Luxembourg, Malta, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Uruguay. Additionally, Armenia, Estonia and Israel
recognize the marriages of same-sex couples validly entered into in
other countries. Same-sex marriage is also due to soon become performed
and recognized by law in Austria, Costa Rica, and Taiwan. Furthermore, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights has issued a ruling which is expected to facilitate recognition in several countries in the Americas.
The introduction of same-sex marriage has varied by jurisdiction, being variously accomplished through legislative change to marriage law, a court ruling based on constitutional guarantees of equality, or by direct popular vote (via ballot initiative or referendum). The recognition of same-sex marriage is considered to be a human right and a civil right as well as a political, social, and religious issue.
The most prominent supporters of same-sex marriage are human rights and
civil rights organizations as well as the medical and scientific
communities, while the most prominent opponents are religious groups.
Various faith communities around the world support same-sex marriage,
while many religious groups oppose it. Polls consistently show
continually rising support for the recognition of same-sex marriage in
all developed democracies and in some developing democracies.
The establishment of recognition in law for the marriages of same-sex couples is one of the most prominent objectives of the LGBT rights movement.
Number of spouses in a marriage
Polygyny is widely practiced in mostly Muslim and African countries. In the Middle Eastern region, Israel, Turkey and Tunisia are notable exceptions.
In most other jurisdictions, polygamy is illegal. For example, In the United States, polygamy is illegal in all 50 states.
Over a century ago, citizens of the self-governing territory of what is present-day Utah were forced by the United States federal government to abandon the practice of polygamy through the vigorous enforcement of several Acts of Congress and eventually complied. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints formally abolished the practice in 1890, in a document labeled 'The Manifesto'. Among American Muslims,
a small minority of around 50,000 to 100,000 people are estimated to
live in families with a husband maintaining an illegal polygamous
relationship.
Several countries such as India and Sri Lanka, permit only their Islamic citizens to practice polygamy. Some Indians have converted to Islam in order to bypass such legal restrictions. Predominantly Christian nations usually do not allow polygamous unions, with a handful of exceptions being the Republic of the Congo, Uganda, and Zambia. Myanmar
(frequently referred to as Burma) is also the only predominantly
Buddhist nation to allow for civil polygynous marriages, though such is
rarely tolerated by the Burmese population.
State recognition
In various jurisdictions, a civil marriage may take place as part of
the religious marriage ceremony, although they are theoretically
distinct. Some jurisdictions allow civil marriages in circumstances
which are notably not allowed by particular religions, such as same-sex marriages or civil unions.
The opposite case may happen as well. Partners may not have full
juridical acting capacity and churches may have less strict limits than
the civil jurisdictions. This particularly applies to minimum age, or
physical infirmities.
It is possible for two people to be recognised as married by a
religious or other institution, but not by the state, and hence without
the legal rights and obligations of marriage; or to have a civil
marriage deemed invalid and sinful by a religion. Similarly, a couple
may remain married in religious eyes after a civil divorce.
Marriage license, civil ceremony and registration
A marriage is usually formalized at a wedding or marriage ceremony.
The ceremony may be officiated either by a religious official, by a
government official or by a state approved celebrant. In various
European and some Latin American countries, any religious ceremony must
be held separately from the required civil ceremony. Some countries –
such as Belgium, Bulgaria, France, the Netherlands, Romania and Turkey
– require that a civil ceremony take place before any religious one. In
some countries – notably the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom,
the Republic of Ireland,
Norway and Spain – both ceremonies can be held together; the officiant
at the religious and civil ceremony also serving as agent of the state
to perform the civil ceremony. To avoid any implication that the state
is "recognizing" a religious marriage (which is prohibited in some
countries) – the "civil" ceremony is said to be taking place at the same
time as the religious ceremony. Often this involves simply signing a
register during the religious ceremony. If the civil element of the
religious ceremony is omitted, the marriage ceremony is not recognized
as a marriage by government under the law.
Some countries, such as Australia, permit marriages to be held in private and at any location; others, including England and Wales,
require that the civil ceremony be conducted in a place open to the
public and specially sanctioned by law for the purpose. In England, the
place of marriage formerly had to be a church or register office,
but this was extended to any public venue with the necessary licence.
An exception can be made in the case of marriage by special emergency
license (UK: licence), which is normally granted only when one of the
parties is terminally ill. Rules about where and when persons can marry
vary from place to place. Some regulations require one of the parties to
reside within the jurisdiction of the register office (formerly
parish).
Each religious authority has rules for the manner in which
marriages are to be conducted by their officials and members. Where
religious marriages are recognised by the state, the officiator must
also conform with the law of the jurisdiction.
Common-law marriage
In a small number of jurisdictions marriage relationships may be created by the operation of the law alone. Unlike the typical ceremonial marriage with legal contract, wedding ceremony, and other details, a common-law marriage
may be called "marriage by habit and repute (cohabitation)." A de facto
common-law marriage without a license or ceremony is legally binding in
some jurisdictions but has no legal consequence in others.
Civil unions
A civil union, also referred to as a civil partnership, is a legally recognized form of partnership similar to marriage. Beginning with Denmark in 1989, civil unions under one name or another have been established by law in several countries in order to provide same-sex couples rights, benefits, and responsibilities similar (in some countries, identical) to opposite-sex civil marriage. In some jurisdictions, such as Brazil, New Zealand, Uruguay, Ecuador, France and the U.S. states of Hawaii and Illinois, civil unions are also open to opposite-sex couples.
"Marriage of convenience"
Sometimes people marry to take advantage of a certain situation, sometimes called a marriage of convenience or a sham marriage. For example, according to one publisher of information about green card marriages,
"Every year over 450,000 United States citizens marry foreign-born
individuals and petition for them to obtain a permanent residency (Green
Card) in the United States." While this is likely an overestimate, in
2003 alone 184,741 immigrants were admitted to the U.S. as spouses of U.S. citizens.
More were admitted as fiancés of US citizens for the purpose of being
married within 90 days. Regardless of the number of people entering the
US to marry a US citizen, it does not indicate the number of these
marriages that are convenience marriages, which number could include
some of those with the motive of obtaining permanent residency, but also
include people who are US citizens. One example would be to obtain an
inheritance that has a marriage clause. Another example would be to save
money on health insurance or to enter a health plan with preexisting
conditions offered by the new spouse's employer. Other situations exist,
and, in fact, all marriages have a complex combination of conveniences
motivating the parties to marry. A marriage of convenience is one that
is devoid of normal reasons to marry. In certain countries like
Singapore sham marriages like these are punishable criminal offences.
Contemporary legal and human rights criticisms of marriage
People have proposed arguments against marriage for reasons that
include political, philosophical and religious criticisms; concerns
about the divorce rate;
individual liberty and gender equality; questioning the necessity of
having a personal relationship sanctioned by government or religious
authorities; or the promotion of celibacy for religious or philosophical reasons.
Power and gender roles in opposite-sex marriages
Feminist theory approaches opposite-sex marriage as an institution traditionally rooted in patriarchy that promotes male superiority and power over women. This power dynamic
conceptualizes men as "the provider operating in the public sphere" and
women as "the caregivers operating within the private sphere".
"Theoretically, women ... [were] defined as the property of their
husbands .... The adultery of a woman was always treated with more
severity than that of a man."
"[F]eminist demands for a wife's control over her own property were not
met [in parts of Britain] until ... [laws were passed in the late 19th
century]."
Traditional heterosexual marriage imposed an obligation of the
wife to be sexually available for her husband and an obligation of the
husband to provide material/financial support for the wife. Numerous
philosophers, feminists and other academic figures have commented on
this throughout history, condemning the hypocrisy of legal and religious
authorities in regard to sexual issues; pointing to the lack of choice
of a woman in regard to controlling her own sexuality; and drawing
parallels between marriage, an institution promoted as sacred, and prostitution, widely condemned and vilified (though often tolerated as a "necessary evil"). Mary Wollstonecraft, in the 18th century, described marriage as "legal prostitution". Emma Goldman
wrote in 1910: "To the moralist prostitution does not consist so much
in the fact that the woman sells her body, but rather that she sells it
out of wedlock". Bertrand Russell in his book Marriage and Morals
wrote that:"Marriage is for woman the commonest mode of livelihood, and
the total amount of undesired sex endured by women is probably greater
in marriage than in prostitution." Angela Carter in Nights at the Circus wrote: "What is marriage but prostitution to one man instead of many?"
Some critics object to what they see as propaganda
in relation to marriage – from the government, religious organizations,
the media – which aggressively promote marriage as a solution for all
social problems; such propaganda includes, for instance, marriage promotion in schools, where children, especially girls, are bombarded with positive information about marriage, being presented only with the information prepared by authorities.
The performance of dominant gender roles by men and submissive
gender roles by women influence the power dynamic of a heterosexual
marriage.
In some American households, women internalize gender role stereotypes
and often assimilate into the role of "wife", "mother", and "caretaker"
in conformity to societal norms and their male partner. Author bell hooks
states "within the family structure, individuals learn to accept sexist
oppression as 'natural' and are primed to support other forms of
oppression, including heterosexist domination." "[T]he cultural, economic, political and legal supremacy of the husband" was "[t]raditional ... under English law". This patriarchal dynamic is contrasted with a conception of egalitarian or Peer Marriage in which power and labour are divided equally, and not according to gender roles.
In the US, studies have shown that, despite egalitarian ideals
being common, less than half of respondents viewed their opposite-sex
relationships as equal in power, with unequal relationships being more
commonly dominated by the male partner.
Studies also show that married couples find the highest level of
satisfaction in egalitarian relationships and lowest levels of
satisfaction in wife dominate relationships. In recent years, egalitarian or Peer Marriages
have been receiving increasing focus and attention politically,
economically and culturally in a number of countries, including the
United States.
Sex outside of marriage
Different societies demonstrate variable tolerance of extramarital
sex. The Standard Cross-Cultural Sample describes the occurrence of
extramarital sex by gender in over 50 pre-industrial cultures.
The occurrence of extramarital sex by men is described as "universal"
in 6 cultures, "moderate" in 29 cultures, "occasional" in 6 cultures,
and "uncommon" in 10 cultures. The occurrence of extramarital sex by
women is described as "universal" in 6 cultures, "moderate" in 23
cultures, "occasional" in 9 cultures, and "uncommon" in 15 cultures.
Three studies using nationally representative samples in the United
States found that between 10–15% of women and 20–25% of men engage in
extramarital sex.
Many of the world's major religions look with disfavor on sexual relations outside marriage. There are non-secular states that sanction criminal penalties for sexual intercourse before marriage. Sexual relations by a married person with someone other than his/her spouse is known as adultery. Adultery is considered in many jurisdictions to be a crime and grounds for divorce.
In some countries, such as Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Kuwait, Maldives, Morocco, Oman, Mauritania, United Arab Emirates, Sudan, Yemen, any form of sexual activity outside marriage is illegal.
In some parts of the world, women and girls accused of having
sexual relations outside marriage are at risk of becoming victims of honor killings committed by their families. In 2011 several people were sentenced to death by stoning after being accused of adultery in Iran, Somalia, Afghanistan, Sudan, Mali and Pakistan.
Practices such as honor killings and stoning continue to be supported
by mainstream politicians and other officials in some countries. In Pakistan, after the 2008 Balochistan honour killings in which five women were killed by tribesmen of the Umrani Tribe of Balochistan, Pakistani Federal Minister for Postal Services Israr Ullah Zehri defended the practice; he said:[170]
"These are centuries-old traditions, and I will continue to defend
them. Only those who indulge in immoral acts should be afraid."
Marriage and sexual violence
An issue that is a serious concern regarding marriage and which has been the object of international scrutiny is that of sexual violence within marriage.
Throughout much of the history, in most cultures, sex in marriage was
considered a 'right', that could be taken by force (often by a man from a
woman), if 'denied'. As the concept of human rights started to develop in the 20th century, and with the arrival of second-wave feminism, such views have become less widely held.
The legal and social concept of marital rape has developed in
most industrialized countries in the mid- to late 20th century; in many
other parts of the world it is not recognized as a form of abuse,
socially or legally. Several countries in Eastern Europe and Scandinavia made marital rape illegal before 1970, and other countries in Western Europe and the English-speaking Western world outlawed it in the 1980s and 1990s. In England and Wales, marital rape was made illegal in 1991. Although marital rape is being increasingly criminalized in developing countries
too, cultural, religious, and traditional ideologies about "conjugal
rights" remain very strong in many parts of the world; and even in many
countries that have adequate laws against rape in marriage these laws
are rarely enforced.
Apart from the issue of rape committed against one's spouse,
marriage is, in many parts of the world, closely connected with other
forms of sexual violence: in some places, like Morocco,
unmarried girls and women who are raped are often forced by their
families to marry their rapist. Because being the victim of rape and
losing virginity
carry extreme social stigma, and the victims are deemed to have their
"reputation" tarnished, a marriage with the rapist is arranged. This is
claimed to be in the advantage of both the victim – who does not remain
unmarried and doesn't lose social status – and of the rapist, who avoids
punishment. In 2012, after a Moroccan 16-year-old girl committed suicide
after having been forced by her family to marry her rapist and enduring
further abuse by the rapist after they married, there have been
protests from activists against this practice which is common in
Morocco.
In some societies, the very high social and religious importance
of marital fidelity, especially female fidelity, has as result the
criminalization of adultery, often with harsh penalties such as stoning or flogging; as well as leniency towards punishment of violence related to infidelity (such as honor killings).
In the 21st century, criminal laws against adultery have become
controversial with international organizations calling for their
abolition.
Opponents of adultery laws argue that these laws are a major
contributor to discrimination and violence against women, as they are
enforced selectively mostly against women; that they prevent women from
reporting sexual violence;
and that they maintain social norms which justify violent crimes
committed against women by husbands, families and communities. A Joint
Statement by the United Nations Working Group on discrimination against
women in law and in practice states that "Adultery as a criminal offence
violates women's human rights".
Some human rights organizations argue that the criminalization of
adultery also violates internationally recognized protections for
private life, as it represents an arbitrary interference with an
individual's privacy, which is not permitted under international law.
Marriage laws, human rights and the global status of women
The laws surrounding heterosexual marriage in many countries have
come under international scrutiny because they contradict international
standards of human rights; institutionalize violence against women, child marriage and forced marriage;
require the permission of a husband for his wife to work in a paid job,
sign legal documents, file criminal charges against someone, sue in
civil court etc.; sanction the use by husbands of violence to
"discipline" their wives; and discriminate against women in divorce.
Such things were legal even in many Western countries until recently: for instance, in France, married women obtained the right to work without their husband's permission in 1965, and in West Germany women obtained this right in 1977 (by comparison women in East Germany had many more rights). In Spain, during Franco's era, a married woman needed her husband's consent, referred to as the permiso marital, for almost all economic activities, including employment, ownership of property, and even traveling away from home; the permiso marital was abolished in 1975.
An absolute submission of a wife to her husband is accepted as
natural in many parts of the world, for instance surveys by UNICEF have
shown that the percentage of women aged 15–49 who think that a husband
is justified in hitting or beating his wife under certain circumstances
is as high as 90% in Afghanistan and Jordan, 87% in Mali, 86% in Guinea
and Timor-Leste, 81% in Laos, 80% in Central African Republic.
Detailed results from Afghanistan show that 78% of women agree with a
beating if the wife "goes out without telling him [the husband]" and 76%
agree "if she argues with him".
Throughout history, and still today in many countries, laws have provided for extenuating circumstances, partial or complete defenses, for men who killed their wives due to adultery, with such acts often being seen as crimes of passion and being covered by legal defenses such as provocation or defense of family honor.
Right and ability to divorce
While international law and conventions recognize the need for
consent for entering a marriage – namely that people cannot be forced to
get married against their will – the right to obtain a divorce is not
recognized; therefore holding a person in a marriage against their will
(if such person has consented to entering in it) is not considered a
violation of human rights, with the issue of divorce being left at the
appreciation of individual states. The European Court of Human Rights has repeatedly ruled that under the European Convention on Human Rights there is neither a right to apply to divorce, nor a right to obtain the divorce if applied for it; in 2017, in Babiarz v. Poland, the Court ruled that Poland was entitled to deny a divorce because the grounds for divorce were not met, even if the marriage in question was acknowledged both by Polish courts and by the ECHR as being a legal fiction involving a long-term separation where the husband lived with another woman with whom he had an 11-year-old child.
In the EU, the last country to allow divorce was Malta, in 2011. Around the world, the only countries to forbid divorce are Philippines and Vatican City, although in practice in many countries which use a fault-based divorce
system obtaining a divorce is very difficult. The ability to divorce,
in law and practice, has been and continues to be a controversial issue
in many countries, and public discourse involves different ideologies
such as feminism, social conservatism, religious interpretations.
Dowry and bridewealth
In recent years, the customs of dowry and bride price have received international criticism for inciting conflicts between families and clans; contributing to violence against women;
promoting materialism; increasing property crimes (where men steal
goods such as cattle in order to be able to pay the bride price); and
making it difficult for poor people to marry. African women's rights
campaigners advocate the abolishing of bride price, which they argue is
based on the idea that women are a form of property which can be bought. Bride price has also been criticized for contributing to child trafficking as impoverished parents sell their young daughters to rich older men.
A senior Papua New Guinea police officer has called for the abolishing
of bride price arguing that it is one of the main reasons for the
mistreatment of women in that country. The opposite practice of dowry has been linked to a high level of violence and to crimes such as extortion.
Children born outside marriage
Historically, and still in many countries, children born outside
marriage suffered severe social stigma and discrimination. In England
and Wales, such children were known as bastards and whoresons.
There are significant differences between world regions in regard
to the social and legal position of non-marital births, ranging from
being fully accepted and uncontroversial to being severely stigmatized
and discriminated.
The 1975 European Convention on the Legal Status of Children Born
out of Wedlock protects the rights of children born to unmarried
parents.
The convention states, among others, that: "The father and mother of a
child born out of wedlock shall have the same obligation to maintain the
child as if it were born in wedlock" and that "A child born out of
wedlock shall have the same right of succession in the estate of its
father and its mother and of a member of its father's or mother's
family, as if it had been born in wedlock."
While in most Western countries legal inequalities between
children born inside and outside marriage have largely been abolished,
this is not the case in some parts of the world.
The legal status of an unmarried father differs greatly from
country to country. Without voluntary formal recognition of the child by
the father, in most cases there is a need of due process of law in
order to establish paternity.
In some countries however, unmarried cohabitation of a couple for a
specific period of time does create a presumption of paternity similar
to that of formal marriage. This is the case in Australia.
Under what circumstances can a paternity action be initiated, the
rights and responsibilities of a father once paternity has been
established (whether he can obtain parental responsibility and whether
he can be forced to support the child)
as well as the legal position of a father who voluntarily acknowledges
the child, vary widely by jurisdiction. A special situation arises when a
married woman has a child by a man other than her husband. Some
countries, such as Israel,
refuse to accept a legal challenge of paternity in such a circumstance,
in order to avoid the stigmatization of the child (see Mamzer, a concept under Jewish law). In 2010, the European Court of Human Rights
ruled in favor of a German man who had fathered twins with a married
woman, granting him right of contact with the twins, despite the fact
that the mother and her husband had forbidden him to see the children.
The steps that an unmarried father must take in order to obtain
rights to his child vary by country. In some countries (such as the UK –
since 2003 in England and Wales, 2006 in Scotland, and 2002 in Northern
Ireland) it is sufficient for the father to be listed on the birth
certificate for him to have parental rights;
in other countries, such as Ireland, simply being listed on the birth
certificate does not offer any rights, additional legal steps must be
taken (if the mother agrees, the parents can both sign a "statutory
declaration", but if the mother does not agree, the father has to apply
to court).
Children born outside marriage have become more common, and in some countries, the majority. Recent data from Latin America showed figures for non-marital childbearing to be 74% for Colombia, 69% for Peru, 68% for Chile, 66% for Brazil, 58% for Argentina, 55% for Mexico. In 2012, in the European Union, 40% of births were outside marriage, and in the United States, in 2013, the figure was similar, at 41%. In the United Kingdom 48% of births were to unmarried women in 2012; in Ireland the figure was 35%.
During the first half of the 20th century, unmarried women in
some Western countries were coerced by authorities to give their
children up for adoption. This was especially the case in Australia, through the forced adoptions in Australia, with most of these adoptions taking place between the 1950s and the 1970s. In 2013, Julia Gillard, then Prime Minister of Australia, offered a national apology to those affected by the forced adoptions.
Some married couples choose not to have children. Others are unable to have children because of infertility or other factors preventing conception or the bearing of children. In some cultures, marriage imposes an obligation on women to bear children. In northern Ghana, for example, payment of bridewealth
signifies a woman's requirement to bear children, and women using birth
control face substantial threats of physical abuse and reprisals.
Marriage and religion
“ | Marriage is the union of two different surnames, in friendship and in love, in order to continue the posterity of the former sages, and to furnish those who shall preside at the sacrifices to heaven and earth, at those in the ancestral temple, and at those at the altars to the spirits of the land and grain. | ” |
— Confucius, |
Religions develop in specific geographic and social milieux.
Unsurprisingly, religious attitudes and practices relating to marriage
can vary.
The precepts of mainstream religions include, as a rule, unequivocal
prescriptions for marriage, establishing both rituals and rules of
conduct.
Abrahamic religions
Bahá'í
The Bahá'í Faith encourages marriage and views it as a mutually strengthening bond, but it is not obligatory. A Bahá'í marriage requires the couple to choose each other, and then obtain the consent of all living parents.
Christianity
Then the Lord God made a woman from the rib he had taken out of the man, and he brought her to the man. The man said, "This is now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called 'woman', for she was taken out of man." For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and they will become one flesh.
...So they are no longer two, but one. Therefore what God has joined together, let man not separate.
— Jesus
Christian marriages are based upon the teachings of Jesus and the Paul the Apostle. As of 2015 many Christian denominations regard marriage as a sacrament, sacred institution, or covenant,[216] but this was not always the case before the 1184 Council of Verona officially recognized marriage as a sacrament.
Before then, no specific ritual was prescribed for celebrating a
marriage: "Marriage vows did not have to be exchanged in a church, nor
was a priest's presence required. A couple could exchange consent
anywhere, anytime."
Decrees on marriage of the Roman Catholic Council of Trent
(twenty-fourth session of 1563) made the validity of marriage dependent
on the wedding occurring in the presence of a priest and two witnesses. The absence of a requirement of parental consent ended a debate that proceeded from the 12th century. In the case of a civil divorce,
the innocent spouse had and has no right to marry again until the death
of the other spouse terminates the still valid marriage, even if the
other spouse was guilty of adultery.
The Christian Church performed marriages in the narthex
of the church prior to the 16th century, when the emphasis was on the
marital contract and betrothal. Subsequently, the ceremony moved inside
the sacristy of the church.
Christians often
marry for religious reasons, ranging from following the biblical
injunction for a "man to leave his father and mother and cleave to his
wife, and the two shall become one", to accessing the Divine grace of the Roman Catholic Sacrament.
Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, as well as many Anglicans and Methodists, consider marriage termed holy matrimony to be an expression of divine grace, termed a sacrament and mystery in the first two Christian traditions. In Western ritual, the ministers of the sacrament are the spouses themselves, with a bishop, priest, or deacon merely witnessing the union on behalf of the Church and blessing it. In Eastern ritual churches,
the bishop or priest functions as the actual minister of the Sacred
Mystery; Eastern Orthodox deacons may not perform marriages. Western
Christians commonly refer to marriage as a vocation, while Eastern Christians consider it an ordination and a martyrdom, though the theological emphases indicated by the various names are not excluded by the teachings of either tradition.[dubious ] Marriage is commonly celebrated in the context of a Eucharistic service (a nuptial Mass or Divine Liturgy). The sacrament of marriage is indicative of the relationship between Christ and the Church.
The Roman Catholic tradition of the 12th and 13th centuries defined marriage as a sacrament ordained by God, signifying the mystical marriage of Christ to his Church.
The matrimonial covenant, by which a man and a woman establish between themselves a partnership of the whole of life, is by its nature ordered toward the good of the spouses and the procreation and education of offspring; this covenant between baptized persons has been raised by Christ the Lord to the dignity of a sacrament.
For Catholic and Methodist Christians, the mutual love between man
and wife becomes an image of the eternal love with which God loves
humankind. In the United Methodist Church,
the celebration of Holy Matrimony ideally occurs in the context of a
Service of Worship, which includes the celebration of the Eucharist.
Likewise, the celebration of marriage between two Catholics normally
takes place during the public liturgical celebration of the Holy Mass,
because of its sacramental connection with the unity of the Paschal
mystery of Christ (Communion). Sacramental marriage confers a perpetual
and exclusive bond between the spouses. By its nature, the institution
of marriage and conjugal love is ordered to the procreation and
upbringing of offspring. Marriage creates rights and duties in the
Church between the spouses and towards their children: "[e]ntering
marriage with the intention of never having children is a grave wrong
and more than likely grounds for an annulment". According to current Roman Catholic
legislation, progeny of annulled relationships are considered
legitimate. Civilly remarried persons who civilly divorced a living and
lawful spouse are not separated from the Church, but they cannot receive
Eucharistic Communion.
Divorce and remarriage,
while generally not encouraged, are regarded differently by each
Christian denomination. Most Protestant Churches allow persons to marry
again after a divorce, while other require an annulment. The Eastern Orthodox Church
allows divorce for a limited number of reasons, and in theory, but
usually not in practice, requires that a marriage after divorce be
celebrated with a penitential overtone. With respect to marriage between
a Christian and a pagan, the early Church "sometimes took a more
lenient view, invoking the so-called Pauline privilege of permissible
separation (1 Cor. 7) as legitimate grounds for allowing a convert to
divorce a pagan spouse and then marry a Christian."
The Catholic Church adheres to the proscription of Jesus in Matthew,
19: 6 that married spouses who have consummated their marriage "are no
longer two, but one flesh. Therefore, what God has joined together, no
human being must separate.” Consequently, the Catholic Church understands that it is wholly without authority to terminate a sacramentally valid and consummated marriage, and its Codex Iuris Canonici (1983 Code of Canon Law) confirms this in Canons 1055-7. Specifically, Canon 1056 declares that "the essential properties of marriage are unity and indissolubility; in [C]hristian marriage they acquire a distinctive firmness by reason of the sacrament." Canon 1057, §2 declares that marriage is "an irrevocable covenant".
Therefore, divorce of such a marriage is a metaphysical, moral, and
legal impossibility. However, the Church has the authority to annul a
presumed "marriage" by declaring it to have been invalid from the
beginning, i. e., declaring it not to be and never to have been a
marriage, in an annulment procedure, which is basically a fact-finding and fact-declaring effort.
For Protestant
denominations, the purposes of marriage include intimate companionship,
rearing children, and mutual support for both spouses to fulfill their
life callings. Most Reformed Christians did not regard marriage to the status of a sacrament
"because they did not regard matrimony as a necessary means of grace
for salvation"; nevertheless it is considered a covenant between spouses
before God. In addition, some Protestant denominations (such as the Methodist Churches) affirmed that Holy Matrimony is a "means of grace, thus, sacramental in character".
Since the 16th century, five competing models of marriage have shaped Protestant marriage and legal tradition:
- The Protestant Reformationists denied the Roman Catholic sacramental model.
- Martin Luther saw marriage as a social "estate of the earthly kingdom ... subject to the prince, not the Pope."
- John Calvin taught that marriage was a covenant of grace that required the coercive power of the state to preserve its integrity.
- Anglicans regarded marriage as a domestic commonwealth within England and the Church. By the 17th century, Anglican theologians had begun to develop a theology of marriage as opposed to the Roman Catholic model of marriage. These "regarded the interlocking commonwealths of state, church, and family as something of an earthly form of heavenly government".
Members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) believe that "marriage between a man and a woman is ordained of God and that the family is central to the Creator's plan for the eternal destiny of His children." Their view of marriage is that family relationships can endure beyond the grave.
This is known as 'eternal marriage' which can be eternal only when
authorized priesthood holders perform the sealing ordinance in sacred temples.
Christian attitudes to same-sex marriage
Although many Christian denominations do not currently perform same-sex marriages, many do, such as the Presbyterian Church (USA), some dioceses of the Episcopal Church, the Metropolitan Community Church, Quakers, United Church of Canada, and United Church of Christ congregations, and some Anglican dioceses, for example. Same-sex marriage is recognized by various religious denominations.
Islam
Islam also commends marriage, with the age of marriage being whenever the individuals feel ready, financially and emotionally.
In Islam, polygyny is allowed while polyandry is not, with the specific limitation that a man can have no more than four legal wives at any one time and an unlimited number of female slaves as concubines, with the requirement that the man is able and willing to partition his time and wealth equally among the respective wives.
For a Muslim wedding to take place, the bridegroom and the guardian of the bride (wali) must both agree on the marriage. Should the guardian disagree on the marriage, it may not legally take place. If the wali
of the girl her father or paternal grandfather, he has the right to
force her into marriage even against her proclaimed will, if it is her
first marriage. A guardian who is allowed to force the bride into
marriage is called wali mujbir.
From an Islamic (Sharia)
law perspective, the minimum requirements and responsibilities in a
Muslim marriage are that the groom provide living expenses (housing,
clothing, food, maintenance) to the bride, and in return, the bride's
main responsibility is raising children to be proper Muslims. All other
rights and responsibilities are to be decided between the husband and
wife, and may even be included as stipulations in the marriage contract
before the marriage actually takes place, so long as they do not go
against the minimum requirements of the marriage.
In Sunni Islam, marriage
must take place in the presence of at least two reliable witnesses,
with the consent of the guardian of the bride and the consent of the
groom. Following the marriage, the couple may consummate the marriage.
To create an 'urf
marriage, it is sufficient that a man and a woman indicate an intention
to marry each other and recite the requisite words in front of a
suitable Muslim. The wedding party usually follows but can be held days,
or months later, whenever the couple and their families want to;
however, there can be no concealment of the marriage as it is regarded
as public notification due to the requirement of witnesses.
In Shia Islam, marriage may take place without the presence of witnesses as is often the case in temporary Nikah mut‘ah
(prohibited in Sunni Islam), but with the consent of both the bride and
the groom. Following the marriage they may consummate their marriage.
Judaism
In Judaism, marriage is based on the laws of the Torah and is a contractual bond between spouses in which the spouses dedicate to be exclusive to one another. This contract is called Kiddushin. Though procreation is not the sole purpose, a Jewish marriage is also expected to fulfill the commandment to have children. The main focus centers around the relationship between the spouses. Kabbalistically,
marriage is understood to mean that the spouses are merging into a
single soul. This is why a man is considered "incomplete" if he is not
married, as his soul is only one part of a larger whole that remains to
be unified.
The Hebrew Bible (Christian Old Testament) describes a number of marriages, including those of Isaac (Gen 24:49–67), Jacob (Gen 29:27) and Samson (Judges 14:7–12). Polygyny, or men having multiple wives at once, is one of the most common marital arrangements represented in the Hebrew Bible. Today Ashkenazi Jews are prohibited to take more than one wife because of a ban instituted on this by Gershom ben Judah (Died 1040).
Among ancient Hebrews, marriage was a domestic affair and not a
religious ceremony; the participation of a priest or rabbi was not
required.
Betrothal (erusin), which refers to the time that this binding contract is made, is distinct from marriage itself (nissu'in), with the time between these events varying substantially.
In biblical times, a wife was regarded as chattel, belonging to her husband;
the descriptions of the Bible suggest that she would be expected to
perform tasks such as spinning, sewing, weaving, manufacture of
clothing, fetching of water, baking of bread, and animal husbandry.
However, wives were usually looked after with care, and men with more
than one wife were expected to ensure that they continue to give the
first wife food, clothing, and marital rights.
Since a wife was regarded as property, her husband was originally free to divorce her for any reason, at any time. Divorcing a woman against her will was also banned by Gershom ben Judah. A divorced couple were permitted to get back together, unless the wife had married someone else after her divorce.
Hinduism
Hinduism sees marriage as a sacred duty that entails both religious and social obligations. Old Hindu literature in Sanskrit
gives many different types of marriages and their categorization
ranging from "Gandharva Vivaha" (instant marriage by mutual consent of
participants only, without any need for even a single third person as
witness) to normal (present day) marriages, to "Rakshasa Vivaha"
("demoniac" marriage, performed by abduction of one participant by the
other participant, usually, but not always, with the help of other
persons). In India and generally in South Asia, arranged marriages, the spouse's parents or an older family member choose the partner, are still predominant in comparison with so called love marriages until nowadays. The Hindu Widow's Remarriage Act 1856 empowers a Hindu widow to remarry.
According to some estimates, there wasn't even 1% of divorce among Hindu arranged marriages.
Buddhism
The Buddhist view of marriage considers marriage a secular affair and thus not a sacrament.
Buddhists are expected to follow the civil laws regarding marriage laid
out by their respective governments. Gautama Buddha, being a kshatriya was required by Shakyan tradition to pass a series of tests to prove himself as a warrior, before he was allowed to marry.
Sikhism
In a Sikh marriage, the couple walks around the Guru Granth Sahib holy book four times, and a holy man recites from it in the kirtan style. The ceremony is known as 'Anand Karaj' and represents the holy union of two souls united as one.
Wicca
Wiccan marriages are commonly known as handfastings. Although
handfastings vary for each Wiccan they often involve honoring Wiccan
gods. Sex is considered a pious and sacred activity.
Marriage and health
Marriage, like other close relationships, exerts considerable influence on health. Married people experience lower morbidity and mortality across such diverse health threats as cancer, heart attacks, and surgery. Research on marriage and health is part of the broader study of the benefits of social relationships.
Social ties provide people with a sense of identity, purpose, belonging, and support. Simply being married, as well as the quality of one's marriage, have been linked to diverse measures of health.
The health-protective effect of marriage is stronger for men than women. Marital status—the simple fact of being married—confers more health benefits to men than women.
Women's health is more strongly impacted than men's by marital
conflict or satisfaction, such that unhappily married women do not enjoy
better health relative to their single counterparts. Most research on marriage and health has focused on heterosexual couples; more work is needed to clarify the health impacts of same-sex marriage.
Divorce and annulment
In most societies, the death of one of the partners terminates the
marriage, and in monogamous societies this allows the other partner to
remarry, though sometimes after a waiting or mourning period.
In some societies, a marriage can be annulled, when an authority declares that a marriage never happened. Jurisdictions often have provisions for void marriages or voidable marriages.
A marriage may also be terminated through divorce.
Countries that have relatively recently legalized divorce are Italy
(1970), Portugal (1975), Brazil (1977), Spain (1981), Argentina (1987),
Paraguay (1991), Colombia (1991), Ireland (1996), Chile (2004) and Malta
(2011). As of 2012, the Philippines and the Vatican City are the only jurisdictions which do not allow divorce (this is currently under discussion in Philippines).)
After divorce, one spouse may have to pay alimony. Laws concerning divorce
and the ease with which a divorce can be obtained vary widely around
the world. After a divorce or an annulment, the people concerned are
free to remarry (or marry).
A statutory right of two married partners to mutually consent to
divorce was enacted in western nations in the mid-20th century. In the
United States no-fault divorce was first enacted in California in 1969 and the final state to legalize it was New York in 1989.
About 45% of marriages in Britain and, according to a 2009 study, 46% of marriages in the U.S. end in divorce.
History of marriage
The history of marriage is often considered under History of the family or legal history.
Ancient world
Ancient Near East
Many cultures have legends concerning the origins of marriage. The
way in which a marriage is conducted and its rules and ramifications has
changed over time, as has the institution itself, depending on the
culture or demographic of the time.
According to ancient Hebrew tradition, a wife was seen as being
property of high value and was, therefore, usually, carefully looked
after. Early nomadic communities in the middle east practised a form of marriage known as beena, in which a wife would own a tent of her own, within which she retains complete independence from her husband;
this principle appears to survive in parts of early Israelite society,
as some early passages of the Bible appear to portray certain wives as
each owning a tent as a personal possession (specifically, Jael, Sarah, and Jacob's wives).
The husband, too, is indirectly implied to have some responsibilities to his wife. The Covenant Code orders "If he take him another; her food, her clothing, and her duty of marriage, shall he not diminish(or lessen)". If the husband does not provide the first wife with these things, she is to be divorced, without cost to her. The Talmud interprets this as a requirement for a man to provide food and clothing to, and have sex with, each of his wives.
However, "duty of marriage" is also interpreted as whatever one does as
a married couple, which is more than just sexual activity. And the term
diminish, which means to lessen, shows the man must treat her as if he
was not married to another.
As a polygynous society, the Israelites did not have any laws that imposed marital fidelity on men. However, the prophet Malachi states that none should be faithless to the wife of his youth and that God hates divorce. Adulterous married women, adulterous betrothed women, and the men who slept with them however, were subject to the death penalty by the biblical laws against adultery According to the Priestly Code of the Book of Numbers, if a pregnant woman was suspected of adultery, she was to be subjected to the Ordeal of Bitter Water, a form of trial by ordeal, but one that took a miracle to convict. The literary prophets indicate that adultery was a frequent occurrence, despite their strong protests against it, and these legal strictnesses.
Classical Greece and Rome
In ancient Greece,
no specific civil ceremony was required for the creation of a
heterosexual marriage – only mutual agreement and the fact that the
couple must regard each other as husband and wife accordingly. Men usually married when they were in their 20s
and women in their teens. It has been suggested that these ages made
sense for the Greeks because men were generally done with military
service or financially established by their late 20s, and marrying a
teenage girl ensured ample time for her to bear children, as life
expectancies were significantly lower. Married Greek women had few rights in ancient Greek society and were expected to take care of the house and children. Time was an important factor in Greek marriage. For example, there were superstitions that being married during a full moon was good luck and, according to Robert Flacelière, Greeks married in the winter.
Inheritance was more important than feelings: a woman whose father dies
without male heirs could be forced to marry her nearest male relative –
even if she had to divorce her husband first.
There were several types of marriages in ancient Roman society. The traditional ("conventional") form called conventio in manum required a ceremony with witnesses and was also dissolved with a ceremony.
In this type of marriage, a woman lost her family rights of inheritance
of her old family and gained them with her new one. She now was subject
to the authority of her husband. There was the free marriage known as sine manu.
In this arrangement, the wife remained a member of her original family;
she stayed under the authority of her father, kept her family rights of
inheritance with her old family and did not gain any with the new
family. The minimum age of marriage for girls was 12.
Germanic tribes
Among ancient Germanic tribes, the bride and groom were roughly the same age and generally older than their Roman counterparts, at least according to Tacitus:
The youths partake late of the pleasures of love, and hence pass the age of puberty unexhausted: nor are the virgins hurried into marriage; the same maturity, the same full growth is required: the sexes unite equally matched and robust; and the children inherit the vigor of their parents.
Where Aristotle had set the prime of life at 37 years for men and 18 for women, the Visigothic Code of law
in the 7th century placed the prime of life at 20 years for both men
and women, after which both presumably married. Tacitus states that
ancient Germanic brides were on average about 20 and were roughly the
same age as their husbands. Tacitus, however, had never visited the German-speaking lands and most of his information on Germania comes from secondary sources. In addition, Anglo-Saxon
women, like those of other Germanic tribes, are marked as women from
the age of 12 and older, based on archaeological finds, implying that
the age of marriage coincided with puberty.
Europe
From the early Christian
era (30 to 325 CE), marriage was thought of as primarily a private
matter, with no uniform religious or other ceremony being required. However, bishop Ignatius of Antioch writing around 110 to bishop Polycarp
of Smyrna exhorts, "[I]t becomes both men and women who marry, to form
their union with the approval of the bishop, that their marriage may be
according to God, and not after their own lust."
In 12th-century Europe, women took the surname of their husbands
and starting in the second half of the 16th century parental consent
along with the church's consent was required for marriage.
With few local exceptions, until 1545, Christian marriages in
Europe were by mutual consent, declaration of intention to marry and
upon the subsequent physical union of the parties.
The couple would promise verbally to each other that they would be
married to each other; the presence of a priest or witnesses was not
required.
This promise was known as the "verbum." If freely given and made in the
present tense (e.g., "I marry you"), it was unquestionably binding; if made in the future tense ("I will marry you"), it would constitute a betrothal.
In 1552 a wedding took place in Zufia, Navarre,
between Diego de Zufia and Mari-Miguel following the custom as it was
in the realm since the Middle Ages, but the man denounced the marriage
on the grounds that its validity was conditioned to "riding" her ("si te cabalgo, lo cual dixo de bascuence (...) balvin yo baneça aren senar içateko").
The tribunal of the kingdom rejected the husband's claim, validating
the wedding, but the husband appealed to the tribunal in Zaragoza, and this institution annulled the marriage. According to the Charter of Navarre,
the basic union consisted of a civil marriage with no priest required
and at least two witnesses, and the contract could be broken using the
same formula.
The Church in turn lashed out at those who got married twice or thrice
in a row while their formers spouses were still alive. In 1563 the Council of Trent, twenty-fourth session, required that a valid marriage must be performed by a priest before two witnesses.
One of the functions of churches from the Middle Ages
was to register marriages, which was not obligatory. There was no state
involvement in marriage and personal status, with these issues being
adjudicated in ecclesiastical courts.
During the Middle Ages marriages were arranged, sometimes as early as
birth, and these early pledges to marry were often used to ensure
treaties between different royal families, nobles, and heirs of
fiefdoms. The church resisted these imposed unions, and increased the
number of causes for nullification of these arrangements.
As Christianity spread during the Roman period and the Middle Ages, the
idea of free choice in selecting marriage partners increased and spread
with it.
In Medieval Western Europe, later marriage and higher rates of definitive celibacy (the so-called "European marriage pattern") helped to constrain patriarchy at its most extreme level. For example, Medieval England
saw marriage age as variable depending on economic circumstances, with
couples delaying marriage until the early twenties when times were bad
and falling to the late teens after the Black Death, when there were labor shortages; by appearances, marriage of adolescents was not the norm in England. Where the strong influence of classical Celtic and Germanic cultures (which were not rigidly patriarchal) helped to offset the Judaeo-Roman patriarchal influence, in Eastern Europe the tradition of early and universal marriage (often in early adolescence) as well as traditional Slavic patrilocal custom led to a greatly inferior status of women at all levels of society.
The average age of marriage for most of Northwestern Europe from 1500 to 1800 was around 25 years of age;
as the Church dictated that both parties had to be at least 21 years of
age to marry without the consent of their parents, the bride and groom
were roughly the same age, with most brides in their early twenties and
most grooms two or three years older, and a substantial number of women married for the first time in their thirties and forties, particularly in urban areas,
with the average age at first marriage rising and falling as
circumstances dictated. In better times, more people could afford to
marry earlier and thus fertility rose and conversely marriages were
delayed or forgone when times were bad, thus restricting family size; after the Black Death, the greater availability of profitable jobs allowed more people to marry young and have more children,
but the stabilization of the population in the 16th century meant fewer
job opportunities and thus more people delaying marriages.
The age of marriage was not absolute, however, as child marriages occurred throughout the Middle Ages and later, with just some of them including:
- The 1552 CE marriage between John Somerford and Jane Somerford Brereto, at the ages of 3 and 2, respectively.
- In the early 1900s, Magnus Hirschfeld surveyed the age of consent in about 50 countries, which he found to often range between 12–16. In the Vatican, the age of consent was 12.
As part of the Protestant Reformation, the role of recording marriages and setting the rules for marriage passed to the state, reflecting Martin Luther's view that marriage was a "worldly thing". By the 17th century, many of the Protestant European countries had a state involvement in marriage.
In England, under the Anglican Church, marriage by consent and cohabitation was valid until the passage of Lord Hardwicke's Act
in 1753. This act instituted certain requirements for marriage,
including the performance of a religious ceremony observed by witnesses.
As part of the Counter-Reformation, in 1563 the Council of Trent decreed that a Roman Catholic
marriage would be recognized only if the marriage ceremony was
officiated by a priest with two witnesses. The Council also authorized a
Catechism,
issued in 1566, which defined marriage as "The conjugal union of man
and woman, contracted between two qualified persons, which obliges them
to live together throughout life."
In the early modern period, John Calvin and his Protestant
colleagues reformulated Christian marriage by enacting the Marriage
Ordinance of Geneva, which imposed "The dual requirements of state
registration and church consecration to constitute marriage" for recognition.
In England and Wales, Lord Hardwicke's Marriage Act 1753 required a formal ceremony of marriage, thereby curtailing the practice of Fleet Marriage, an irregular or a clandestine marriage.
These were clandestine or irregular marriages performed at Fleet
Prison, and at hundreds of other places. From the 1690s until the
Marriage Act of 1753 as many as 300,000 clandestine marriages were
performed at Fleet Prison alone. The Act required a marriage ceremony to be officiated by an Anglican priest in the Anglican Church
with two witnesses and registration. The Act did not apply to Jewish
marriages or those of Quakers, whose marriages continued to be governed
by their own customs.
In England and Wales, since 1837, civil marriages have been recognized as a legal alternative to church marriages under the Marriage Act 1836.
In Germany, civil marriages were recognized in 1875. This law permitted
a declaration of the marriage before an official clerk of the civil
administration, when both spouses affirm their will to marry, to
constitute a legally recognized valid and effective marriage, and
allowed an optional private clerical marriage ceremony.
In contemporary English common law, a marriage is a voluntary contract by a man and a woman, in which by agreement they choose to become husband and wife. Edvard Westermarck proposed that "the institution of marriage has probably developed out of a primeval habit".
As of 2000, the average marriage age range was 25–44 years for men and 22–39 years for women.
China
The mythological origin of Chinese heterosexual marriage is a story about Nüwa and Fu Xi
who invented proper marriage procedures after becoming married. In
ancient Chinese society, people of the same surname are supposed to
consult with their family trees
prior to marriage to reduce the potential risk of unintentional incest.
Marrying one's maternal relatives was generally not thought of as
incest. Families sometimes intermarried from one generation to another.
Over time, Chinese people became more geographically mobile. Individuals
remained members of their biological families. When a couple died, the
husband and the wife were buried separately in the respective clan's
graveyard. In a maternal marriage a male would become a son-in-law who
lived in the wife's home.
The New Marriage Law of 1950 radically changed Chinese heterosexual marriage traditions, enforcing monogamy, equality of men and women, and choice in marriage; arranged marriages
were the most common type of marriage in China until then. Starting
October 2003, it became legal to marry or divorce without authorization
from the couple's work units. Although people with infectious diseases such as AIDS may now marry, marriage is still illegal for the mentally ill.