href="@public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@49107@[email protected]#Page_324" class="pginternal" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">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 of Marriage |
370-386 |
II. |
As to the Nature of Marriage |
386-399 |
III. |
Child-Marriages in the Age of Elizabeth |
399-403 |
Chapter X. |
Rise of Civil Marriage |
404-473 |
I. |
Cromwell's Civil Marriage Act, 1653 |
408-435 |
II. |
Fleet Marriages and the Hardwicke Act, 1753 |
435-460 |
III. |
The Present English Law |
460-473 |
VOLUME TWO
PART II—Continued
Chapter XI. History of Separation and Divorce under English and Ecclesiastical Law |
3-117 |
I. The Early Christian Doctrine and the Theory of the Canon Law |
11-60 |
a) Historical Elements of the Christian Teaching |
11-23 |
b) Views of the Early Fathers |
23-28 |
c) The Legislation of the Christian Emperors |
28-33 |
d) The Compromise with German Custom |
33-46 |
e) Final Settlement of the Christian Doctrine in the Canon Law |
47-60 |
II. The Protestant Doctrine of Divorce |
60-85 |
a) Opinions of Luther and the Continental Reformers |
60-71 |
b) Opinions of the English Reformers |
71-85 |
III. Law and Theory during Three Centuries |
85-117 |
a) The Views of Milton |
85-92 |
b) Void and Voidable Contracts |
92-102 |
c) Parliamentary Divorce |
102-109 |
d) The Present English Law |
109-117 |
PART III
MATRIMONIAL INSTITUTIONS IN THE UNITED STATES
Chapter XII. Obligatory Civil Marriage in the New England Colonies |
121-226 |
I. The Magistrate Supersedes the Priest at the Nuptials |
125-143 |
II. Banns, Consent, and Registration |
143-151 |
III. Courtship, Proposals, and Government of Single Persons |
152-169 |
IV. Pre-contracts, Bundling, and Sexual Immorality |
169-200 |
V. Breach of Promise and Marriage Portions |
200-209 |
VI. Self-Gifta, Clandestine Contracts, and Forbidden Degrees |
209-215 |
VII. Slave-Marriages |
215-226 |
Chapter XIII. Ecclesiastical Rites and the Rise of Civil Marriage in the Southern Colonies |
227-263 |
I. The Religious Ceremony and Lay Administration in Virginia |
228-239 |
II. Optional Civil Marriage and the Rise of Obligatory Religious Celebration in Maryland |
239-247 |
III. The Struggle for Civil Marriage and Free Religious Celebration in North Carolina |
247-259 |
|