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 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 Law3-117
I. The Early Christian Doctrine and the Theory of the Canon Law11-60
a) Historical Elements of the Christian Teaching11-23
b) Views of the Early Fathers23-28
c) The Legislation of the Christian Emperors28-33
d) The Compromise with German Custom33-46
e) Final Settlement of the Christian Doctrine in the Canon Law47-60
II. The Protestant Doctrine of Divorce60-85
a) Opinions of Luther and the Continental Reformers60-71
b) Opinions of the English Reformers71-85
III. Law and Theory during Three Centuries85-117
a) The Views of Milton85-92
b) Void and Voidable Contracts92-102
c) Parliamentary Divorce102-109
d) The Present English Law109-117

PART III

MATRIMONIAL INSTITUTIONS IN THE UNITED STATES

Chapter XII. Obligatory Civil Marriage in the New England Colonies121-226
I. The Magistrate Supersedes the Priest at the Nuptials125-143
II. Banns, Consent, and Registration143-151
III. Courtship, Proposals, and Government of Single Persons152-169
IV. Pre-contracts, Bundling, and Sexual Immorality169-200
V. Breach of Promise and Marriage Portions200-209
VI. Self-Gifta, Clandestine Contracts, and Forbidden Degrees209-215
VII. Slave-Marriages215-226
Chapter XIII. Ecclesiastical Rites and the Rise of Civil Marriage in the Southern Colonies227-263
I. The Religious Ceremony and Lay Administration in Virginia228-239
II. Optional Civil Marriage and the Rise of Obligatory Religious Celebration in Maryland239-247
III. The Struggle for Civil Marriage and Free Religious Celebration in North Carolina247-259
IV. Episcopal Rites by Law and Free Civil or Religious Celebration by Custom in South Carolina and Georgia260-263
Chapter XIV. Optional Civil or Ecclesiastical Marriage in the Middle Colonies264-327
I. New York266-308
a) Law and Custom in New Netherland267-284
b) Law and Custom under the Duke of York284-296
c) Law and Custom in the Royal Province296-308
II. New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware308-327
a) Law and Custom in New Jersey308-315
b) Law and Custom in Pennsylvania and Delaware315-327
Chapter XV. Divorce in the American Colonies328-387
I. In New England330-366
a) Massachusetts330-348
b) New Hampshire, Plymouth, and New Haven348-353
c) Connecticut353-360
d) Rhode Island360-366
II. English Divorce Laws in Abeyance in the Southern Colonies366-376
Arbitration and Divorce in the Middle Colonies376-387
Chapter XVI. A Century and a Quarter of Marriage Legislation in the United States, 1776-1903388-497
I. The New England States388-408
a) Solemnization389-395
b) Forbidden Degrees: Void and Voidable Marriages395-401
c) Certificate and Record401-408
II. The Southern and Southwestern States408-452
a) Solemnization409-427
b) Forbidden Degrees: Void and Voidable Marriages427-441
c) Certificate and Record441-452
III. The Middle and the Western States452-497
a) Solemnization452-470
b) Forbidden Degrees: Void and Voidable Marriages470-481
c) Certificate and Record481-497

VOLUME THREE

PART III—Continued

Chapter XVII. A Century and a Quarter of Divorce Legislation in the United States3-160
I. The New England States3-30
a) Jurisdiction: Causes and Kinds of Divorce4-18
b) Remarriage, Residence, Notice, and Miscellaneous Provisions18-28
c) Alimony, Property, and Custody of Children28-30
II. The Southern and Southwestern States31-95
a) Legislative Divorce31-50
b) Judicial Divorce: Jurisdiction, Kinds, and Causes50-79
c) Remarriage, Residence, Notice, and Miscellaneous Provisions79-90
d) Alimony, Property, and Custody of Children90-95
III. The Middle and the Western States96-160
a) Legislative Divorce96-101
b) Judicial Divorce: Jurisdiction, Kinds, and Causes101-144
c) Remarriage, Residence, Notice, and Miscellaneous Provisions145-160
Chapter XVIII. Problems of Marriage and the Family161-259
I. The Function of Legislation167-223
a) The Statutes and the Common-Law Marriage170-185
b) Resulting Character of Matrimonial Legislation185-203
c) Resulting Character of Divorce Legislation203-223
II. The Function of Education223-259
Bibliographical Index263-402
I. Early History of Matrimonial Institutions264-291
II. Matrimonial Institutions in England and under Germanic and Canon Law291-339
III. Matrimonial Institutions in the United States339-355
a) Manuscripts339-340
b) Books and Articles340-355
IV. Problems of Marriage and the Family355-396
V. Session Laws and Collected Statutes Used in Chapters XVI-XVIII396-402
Case Index405-411
Subject Index413-449

PART I
ANALYSIS OF THE LITERATURE AND THE THEORIES
OF PRIMITIVE MATRIMONIAL INSTITUTIONS


CHAPTER I
THE PATRIARCHAL THEORY

[Bibliographical Note I.—The modern history of the patriarchal theory begins with Filmer's Patriarchia (London, 1680), in which the author finds in the Hebrew family a justification of the "divine prerogative" of kings; and the trenchant reply of Locke in The Two Treatises on Civil Government (London, 1690), reprinted with Filmer's work in the ninth volume of Morley's Universal Library. But the theory is especially associated with the name of Sir Henry Maine. His Ancient Law (New York, 1861), aside from its leading hypothesis, is one of the most suggestive books of the century. It was followed by the Early History of Institutions (New York, 1875); the Village Communities (New York, 1876); and Early Law and Custom (New York, 1883). In this last work he contributes supplementary chapters on such topics as "Ancestor-Worship" and "East European House Communities," and he replies to his critics. Maine is criticised by Spencer, Principles of Sociology (New York, 1879), Vol. I, Part III, chap. ix; and by McLennan, Patriarchal Theory (London, 1885), who, on the negative side, is fairly successful in confuting his adversary. Hearn's Aryan Household (London, 1879) and the Ancient City (Boston, 1877) of Fustel de Coulanges take practically the same view of primitive society as Maine, while particularly emphasizing ancestor-worship and the genealogical organization.

For the early Aryans and the Hindus see Zimmer's Alt-indisches Leben (Berlin, 1879); Delbrück's Die indogermanischen Verwandtschaftsnamen (Leipzig, 1885); Schrader's Sprachvergleichung und Urgeschichte (Jena, 1883), or the English translation by Jevons (London, 1890); Zmigrodski's Die Mutter bei den Völkern des arischen Stammes (Munich, 1886); and especially Leist's epoch-making works, Graeco-italische Rechtsgeschichte (Jena, 1884) and the Alt-arisches Jus Gentium (Jena, 1889). Of first-rate value also are the Rechtshistorische und rechtsvergleichende Forschungen (Part III, on Indisches Ehe- und Familienrecht) and the other papers of the indefatigable Kohler. Of these the following are particularly interesting in this connection, all found in the Zeitschrift für vergleichende Rechtswissenschaft: "Rechtsverhältnisse auf dem ostind. Archipel u. den westl. Karolinen," ZVR., VI, 344-50; "Gewohnheitsrechte des Pendschabs," ibid., VII, 161-239; "Indische Gewohnheitsrechte," ibid., VIII, 89-147, 262-73; "Gewohnheitsrechte von Bengalen," ibid., IX, 321-60; "Gewohnheitsrechte der Provinz Bombay," ibid., X, 64-142, 161-88; "Gewohnheitsrechte der ind. Nordwestprovinzen," ibid., XI, 161-95; and, for comparison, "Die Ionsage und Vaterrecht," ibid., V, 407-14; "Studien über künstliche Verwandtschaft," ibid., V, 415-40; and "Das Recht der Armenier," ibid., VII, 385-436. As in the last-named paper, the influence of Roman law may be traced in Mégavorian, Étude ethnographique et juridique sur la famille et le mariage arméniens (Paris, 1894). Hass, "Die Heirathsgebrāuche der alten Inder nach den Grihyasûtra," in Weber's Indische Studien, V, 267-412 (Berlin, 1862), reveals in an admirable way the religious spirit pervading the ancient Hindu matrimonial life. This study suggested the excellent monograph of Weber, "Vedische Hochzeitssprüche," ibid., V, 177-266; while the conclusions of both Haas and Weber are ably supported, with the aid of additional sources, by the more elaborate paper of Winternitz, "Das altindische Hochzeitsrituell," in Denkschriften der kais. Akad. d. Wiss., phil.-hist. Klasse, XL, 1-113 (Vienna, 1892). In this connection, for comparison, may be read Mackenzie, "An Account of the Marriage Ceremonies of the Hindus and Mahommedans as Practised in the Southern Peninsula of India," in Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society, III (London, 1835); and Lushington, "On the Marriage Rites and Usages of the Jâts of Bharatpur," in Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, II, 273-97 (Calcutta, 1833). Especially important are Bernhöft's "Die Grundlagen der Rechtsentwicklung bei den indogermanischen Völkern," in ZVR., II, 253-328; his "Altindisches Familienorganisation," ibid., IX, 1-45; and his "Das Gesetz von Gortyn," ibid., VI, 281-304, 430-40. A popular, but in the main uncritical, book is Clarisse Bader's La femme dans l'Inde antique (2d ed., Paris, 1867). Similar in plan and treatment are her La femme biblique (new ed., Paris, 1873); La femme grecque (2d ed., Paris, 1873); and La femme romaine (2d ed., Paris, 1877). A strong defense of the dignified position of the ancient Indic woman, based on the sources, may be found in Jacolliot's La femme dans l'Inde (Paris, 1877); and Mary Frances Billington is a vigorous champion of the social status of modern Woman in India (London, 1895). See also Pizzi, "Les coutumes nuptiales aux temps héroïques de l'Iran," in La Muséon, II, 3 (1883); Vidyasagar, On Widow-Marriages among the Hindus (Calcutta, 1855); and Schlagintweit, "Die Hindu-Wittwe in Indien," in Globus, XLIII (1883). Among the best technical writings are Mayne's Hindu Law and Usage (Madras and London, 1888); Jolly's Hindu Law of Partition (Calcutta, 1885); his Rechtliche Stellung der Frauen bei den alten Indern (Munich, 1876); Tupper's Punjab Customary Law (Calcutta, 1881); and Gooroodass's "The Hindu Law of Marriage and Stridahn," in Tagore Law Lectures, 1878 (Calcutta, 1879). Max Müller's series of Sacred Books contains Apastamba, Gautama, Visnu, and the other Sūtras, as well as the later versified law-books of Manu and Yājñavalkya, with other sources of ancient Indic custom. Burnell and Hopkins's Manu (London, 1891) is an excellent edition; and Jolly has a German translation of Books VIII and IX in ZVR., III, 232-83; IV, 321-61. For each important point these sources are thoroughly collated in the writings of Kohler, Leist, and Jolly, above referred to.

For the Slavs, Krauss's Sitte und Brauch der Südslaven (Vienna, 1885) is the most valuable treatise. See also Turner, Slavisches Familienrecht (Strassburg, 1874); and Kovalevsky's Modern Customs and Ancient Laws of Russia (London, 1891), in which the author criticises and corrects Sir Henry Maine on important points. For Greece, in addition to Leist's works above mentioned, see the paper of Campaux, Du mariage à Athènes (Paris, 1867); that of Moy, "La famille dans Homère," in Revue des cours littéraires, 8 mars 1869; Stegeren, De conditione civili feminarum atheniensium (Zwallae, 1839); Ouvré, Observations sur le régime matrimonial au temps d'Homère (Paris, 1886); Lasaulx, Zur Geschichte und Philosophie der Ehe bei den Griechen (Munich, 1852); especially Hruza's Die Ehebegründung nach attischem Rechte (Erlangen and Leipzig, 1892); and his Polygamie und Pellikat nach griechischem Rechte (Erlangen and Leipzig, 1894).

On the matrimonial institutions of the Romans consult Marquardt's Privatleben; Lange's Römische Alterthümer; Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities; Müller's Handbuch; Bernhöft's Staat und Recht der rom. Königszeit (Stuttgart, 1882); Karlowa's Die Formen der röm. Ehe und Manus (Bonn, 1868); Rossbach's Die röm. Ehe (Stuttgart, 1853); his Römische Hochzeits- und Ehedenkmäler (Leipzig, 1871); Laband's "Rechtliche Stellung der Frauen im altröm. und germanischen Recht," in Zeitschrift für Völkerpsychologie, III (Berlin, 1865); and Bouchez-Leclercq's Manuel des inst. romaines (Paris, 1886). From the mass of writings which are of service for this and the four subsequent chapters may also be mentioned Brissonius, De ritu nuptiarum (Paris, 1564); his De jure connubiorum (Paris, 1564); Hotman, De veteri ritu nuptiarum observatio; his De sponsalibus; his De ritu nuptiarum et jure matrimoniorum—all published and bound with the two works of Brissonius (Leyden, 1641); Grupen, De uxore romana (Hannover, 1727); Ayrer, De jure connubiorum apud romanos (Göttingen, 1736); the anonymous Dei riti delle antiche nozze romane (Perugia, 1791); Maanen, De muliere in manu et in tutela (Lugd. Bat., 1823); Schultz, De jure succedendi feminarum apud romanos (Trajecti ad Rhenum, 1826); Chamblain, De la puissance paternelle chez les romains (Paris, 1829); Eggers, Wesen und Eigenthümlichkeiten der altröm. Ehe mit Manus (Altona, 1833); Mahlmann, De matrimonii veterum romanorum ineundi (Halle, 1845); Hase, De manu juris romani (Halle, 1847); Gerlach, De romanorum connubio (Halle, 1851); Dubief, Qualis fuerit familia romana tempore Plauti (Molini, 1859); Pagés, La famille romaine (Toulouse, 1892); Louïse, Du sénatus-consulte velléien et de l'incapacité de la femme mariée (Chateau-Thierry, 1873); Bourdin, De la condition de la mère en droit romain et en droit français (Paris, 1881); Salomon, Du mariage du droit des gens et en général des mariages sans connubium (Paris, 1889); Desminis, Die Eheschenkung nach röm. und insbesondere nach byzantinischem Recht (Athens, 1897); and Ciccotti, Donne e politica negli ultimi anni della republica romana (Milan, 1895). The criticisms of Kuntze, Excurse über röm. Recht (2d ed., Leipzig, 1880), and Esmein, Mélanges d'histoire du droit et de critique (Paris, 1886), are of great value on various important questions. Compare also Couch, "Woman in Early Roman Law," in Harvard Law Review, VIII (Cambridge, 1895); Picot, Du mariage romain, chrétien, et français (Paris, 1849); Monlezun, Condition civile de la femme mariée à Rome et en France (Paris, 1878); Tardieu, De la puissance paternelle en droit romain et en droit français (Paris, 1875); and Cornil, "Contribution à l'étude de la patria potestas," in Nouv. rev. hist. de droit, XXI, 416-85 (Paris, 1897). Gide's excellent Étude sur la condition privée de la femme (2d ed., Paris, 1885) deals with the laws of Greece, Rome, and other nations. Poste's edition of Gaius's Institutionum juris civilis commentarii quatuor (Oxford, 1875) is an indispensable source; and among legal treatises are particularly to be commended Muirhead's Introduction to the Private Law of Rome (Edinburgh, 1886); Puchta's Institutionen; Moyle's Institutionum Libri (Oxford, 1890); Rein, Privatrecht (Leipzig, 1836); and especially Sohm's Institutes (Oxford, 1892), by far the best work on the subject for historical purposes, showing the rare insight, clearness of analysis, and vigorous style peculiar to the author. Most readers will find the short Introduction of Hadley and the excellent Outlines of Professor Morey sufficient. For the general subject of marriage and the family the Zeitschrift für vergleichende Rechtswissenchaft (Stuttgart, 1878-96) is indispensable; while the Kritische Vierteljahresschrift für Gesetzgebung und Rechtswissenschaft and the Zeitschrift für Ethnologie are also of constant service.

For the literature of Arabian and Hebrew matrimonial institutions, respectively, see Bibliographical Notes II and IV.

The student who has not yet seriously attacked the literature of the subject will do well to begin with the following: Tylor, "On a Method of Investigating the Development of Institutions, Applied to Laws of Marriage and Descent," in Journal of Anth. Inst., XVIII, No. 3; Bernhöft's "Zur Geschichte des europäischen Familienrechts," in ZVR., VIII, 1-27, 161-221, 384-405; in connection with his "Principien des europäischen Familienrechts," ibid., IX, 392-444; Friedrichs, "Familien-Stufen und Eheformen," ibid., X, 189-281; the first two chapters of Posada's Théories modernes (Paris, 1896); and the first three chapters of Botsford's Athenian Constitution (Boston, 1893), one of the ablest contributions to comparative institutions. This is supplemented by H. E. Seebohm's Structure of Greek Tribal Society (London and New York, 1895). For summaries of the results of investigations, from different points of view, Delbrück's "Das Mutterrecht bei den Indogermanen," in Preussische Jahrbücher, XCVII, 14-27 (Berlin, 1895), may be compared with Dargun's Mutterrecht und Vaterrecht (Leipzig, 1892), containing a criticism of the views of many recent writers.]

It is the primary purpose of this book to trace the development of the family and marriage in the "three homes" of the English race. An attempt is made to describe the mechanism provided by the state for the administration of matrimonial law; and to appreciate the importance of some of the many problems centering in the family as a social institution. Necessarily a theme so broad may here be treated only in outline. Yet in the outset it is the limitations of the subject which require to be most carefully noted. It is but a part of the wide field of family history which receives special attention. We are closely concerned with the forms of celebration and divorce as they existed among our Teutonic ancestors, and as they have since been molded by custom and legislation in England and the United States. Only in a secondary degree are we interested in the intricate law of the domestic relations. Except incidentally, we are not now called upon to consider the property rights of husband and wife, the laws of guardian and ward, or the rules of kinship and succession.

More pertinent is the general question of the genesis of human marriage and the human family.[1] It will be impossible, of course, to examine independently the many difficult problems which have arisen in this connection. Even the specialist may find it hard to trace a clear way through the bewildering maze of existing theory and sub-theory. It seems desirable, therefore, by way of introduction, to present as clearly and briefly as may be the more salient results of recent investigation. Marriage is a product of social experience. Hence to understand its modern aspects it is needful to appeal to the general sociological facts surrounding its origin and its early history among the races of mankind. It is necessary to get our bearings. At the dawn of history the Teutonic family was essentially monogamic, originating in a contractual relation. What, then, do we know as to the origin of the monogamic family and regarding the conditions under which marriage by contract arose? Part I will concern itself with the solution of this question.

The literature[2] of primitive marriage and the family is already formidable; and, however contradictory and discouraging, on first examination, its conclusions may appear, there can be little doubt that they demonstrate the possibilities of the comparative method[3] in the domain of social institutions. It is in this field, indeed, that evolutional science bids fair to achieve its most signal triumph. At last, in the laboratory of science, there is some prospect that man may come really to know himself. On the other hand, it is precisely in the study of primitive marriage that the "perils of historical narrative" are most clearly revealed.[4] Nowhere, perhaps, can there be found rasher inference[5] and more sweeping generalization from inadequate data. Too often economic and psychological laws have been slighted; and, in a field where their careful observance is so vitally important, the fundamental principles of organic evolution—such, for instance, as natural selection—have frequently been ignored.[6] A vast mass of interesting facts relating to man's social development, highly important for him to know, has been disclosed. But, with a few notable exceptions, the signal failure of investigators thus far has been the attempt to sustain theories of uniform social progress. The criticism, especially, to which the writings of Bachofen, Maine, Morgan, and McLennan have given rise has greatly weakened the faith of scholars in the doctrine of universal stages of evolution through which all mankind has run.[7]