قراءة كتاب A History of Matrimonial Institutions, Volume 3 (of 3)
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A History of Matrimonial Institutions, Volume 3 (of 3)
الصفحة رقم: 1
A HISTORY OF
Matrimonial Institutions
CHIEFLY IN ENGLAND AND THE UNITED STATES WITH AN INTRODUCTORY
ANALYSIS OF THE LITERATURE AND THE
THEORIES OF PRIMITIVE MARRIAGE
AND THE FAMILY
BY
GEORGE ELLIOTT HOWARD Ph.D.
PROFESSORIAL LECTURER IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO AUTHOR OF "LOCAL
CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES"
VOLUME THREE
CHICAGO
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS
CALLAGHAN & COMPANY
LONDON
T. FISHER UNWIN, PATERNOSTER SQUARE
1904
Copyright 1904
The University of Chicago
Entered at Stationers' Hall
May, 1904
TO
Alice Frost Howard
HER HUSBAND DEDICATES THIS BOOK IN
GRATEFUL RECOGNITION OF HER
AID IN MAKING IT
ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS
VOLUME ONE
PART I
ANALYSIS OF THE LITERATURE AND THE THEORIES OF PRIMITIVE MATRIMONIAL INSTITUTIONS
PAGES | ||
Chapter I. | The Patriarchal Theory | 3-32 |
I. | Statement of the Theory | 9-13 |
II. | Criticism of the Theory by Spencer and McLennan | 14-17 |
III. | The Theory in the Light of Recent Research | 18-32 |
Chapter II. | Theory of the Horde and Mother-Right | 33-89 |
I. | Bachofen and His Disciples | 39-65 |
II. | Morgan's Constructive Theory | 65-76 |
III. | McLennan's Constructive Theory | 77-89 |
Chapter III. | Theory of the Original Pairing or Monogamous Family | 89-151 |
I. | The Problem of Promiscuity | 90-110 |
II. | The Problem of Mother-Right | 110-117 |
III. | The Problem of Exogamy | 117-132 |
IV. | The Problem of the Successive Forms of the Family | 132-151 |
Chapter IV. | Rise of the Marriage Contract | 152-223 |
I. | Wife-Capture and the Symbol of Rape | 156-179 |
II. | Wife-Purchase and Its Survival in the Marriage Ceremony | 179-201 |
III. | The Antiquity of Self-Betrothal or Free Marriage | 201-210 |
IV. | Primitive Free Marriage Surviving with Purchase, and the Decay of the Purchase-Contract | 210-223 |
Chapter V. | Early History of Divorce | 224-250 |
I. | The Right of Divorce | 224-240 |
II. | The Form of Divorce | 240-241 |
III. | The Legal Effects of Divorce | 241-247 |
IV. | Frequency of Divorce | 247-250 |
PART II
MATRIMONIAL INSTITUTIONS IN ENGLAND
Chapter VI. | Old English Wife-Purchase Yields to Free Marriage | 253-286 |
I. | The Primitive Real Contract of Sale and Its Modifications | 258-276 |
II. | Rise of Free Marriage: Self-Beweddung and Self-Gifta | 276-286 |
Chapter VII. | Rise of Ecclesiastical Marriage: The Church Accepts the Lay Contract and Ceremonial | 287-320 |
I. | The Primitive Christian Benediction, the Bride-Mass, and the Celebration ad Ostium Ecclesiae | 291-308 |
II. | The Priest Supersedes the Chosen Guardian, and Sponsalia per Verba de Praesenti Are Valid | 308-320 |
Chapter VIII. | Rise of Ecclesiastical Marriage: The Church Develops and Administers Matrimonial Law | 321-363 |
I. | The Early Christian Doctrine and the Rise of the Canonical Theory | 324-340 |
II. | Clandestine Marriages the Fruit of the Canonical Theory | 340-349 |
III. | The Evils of the Spiritual Jurisdiction | 351-359 |
IV. | Publicity Sought through Banns and Registration | 359-363 |
Chapter IX. | The Protestant Conception of Marriage | 364-403 |
I. | As to the Form |