[809] Post, Grundlagen, 276.
[810] So in Lika. In Stara Pazva the woman receives back her dotal portion; and in Stro[vs]inci common gains are divided: Krauss, op. cit., 295, 296; Post, Familienrecht, 316.
[811] In the archipelago of Seranglao and Gorong the lands and houses which each party had before the marriage are retained by each, and the winnings are divided, the man receiving two-thirds and the woman one-third: Post, loc. cit.
[812] Henrici, "Das Recht der Epheneger," ZVR., XI, 135 (alimony). For many examples of these rules see Post, Familienrecht, 316-20; idem, Afrikanische Jurisprudenz, I, 441-47. Thus in Morocco, should the husband put away his wife without cause, he must give her in presence of the judge a present (etwas Beliebiges) in value to suit himself; and a similar present is adequate for either party divorcing the other among the Moorish Braknas. In the East African city of Harar the husband responsible for the separation loses the purchase price, pays the woman a sum equal to it in value, and besides is obliged to support her outside of his dwelling during a term to be fixed by the cadi: Post, Familienrecht, 320; idem, Afrikanische Jurisprudenz, I, 443, 445. In the South Slavonian Bocca, Crnagora, and Herzegovina the husband who puts away his wife because she is affected by a disease is usually required to give her a lifelong support; and ordinarily, when he is accountable for the separation, he must pay a fine of from 50 to 100 thaler: Krauss, op. cit., 567. For various illustrations see Letourneau, op. cit., 289 ff.
[813] Thus, among the Moors of Morocco, who almost all practice monogamy, the man who rejects his wife is not permitted to marry again within four months: Post, Afrikanische Jurisprudenz, I, 450.
[814] Cf. the suggestion of Post, loc. cit.
[815] See the examples enumerated in Post, Familienrecht, 264; idem, Afrikanische Jurisprudenz, I, 453; among them are the people of Tonga, Tahiti, and Unyoro; also Dawan (West Timor) when the divorce is through the fault of the husband.
[816] Post, Afrikanische Jurisprudenz, I, 450.
[817] Waitz-Gerland, Anthropologie, VI, 129; Post, Familienrecht, 263.
[818] Thus in the African Sarae the divorced woman must wait two months before remarriage: Munzinger, Ostaf. Studien, 387; among the Beni Amer, three months; while the Marea woman is obliged to refrain for a year: ibid., 241, 321.