| 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
PART III
MATRIMONIAL INSTITUTIONS IN THE UNITED STATES
PART III—Continued
| Chapter XVII. A Century and a Quarter of Divorce Legislation in the United States | 3-160 |
| I. The New England States | 3-30 |
| a) Jurisdiction: Causes and Kinds of Divorce | 4-18 |
| b) Remarriage, Residence, Notice, and Miscellaneous Provisions | 18-28 |
| c) Alimony, Property, and Custody of Children | 28-30 |
| II. The Southern and Southwestern States | 31-95 |
| a) Legislative Divorce | 31-50 |
| b) Judicial Divorce: Jurisdiction, Kinds, and Causes | 50-79 |
| c) Remarriage, Residence, Notice, and Miscellaneous Provisions | 79-90 |
| d) Alimony, Property, and Custody of Children | 90-95 |
| III. The Middle and the Western States | 96-160 |
| a) Legislative Divorce | 96-101 |
| b) Judicial Divorce: Jurisdiction, Kinds, and Causes | 101-144 |
| c) Remarriage, Residence, Notice, and Miscellaneous Provisions | 145-160 |
| Chapter XVIII. Problems of Marriage and the Family | 161-259 |
| I. The Function of Legislation | 167-223 |
| a) The Statutes and the Common-Law Marriage | 170-185 |
| b) Resulting Character of Matrimonial Legislation | 185-203 |
| c) Resulting Character of Divorce Legislation | 203-223 |
| II. The Function of Education | 223-259 |
| Bibliographical Index | 263-402 |
| I. Early History of Matrimonial Institutions | 264-291 |
| II. Matrimonial Institutions in England and under Germanic and Canon Law | 291-339 |
| III. Matrimonial Institutions in the United States | 339-355 |
| a) Manuscripts | 339-340 |
| b) Books and Articles | 340-355 |
| IV. Problems of Marriage and the Family | 355-396 |
| V. Session Laws and Collected Statutes Used in Chapters XVI-XVIII | 396-402 |
| Case Index | 405-411 |
| Subject Index | 413-449 |