[728] Spotswood, Letters, I, 128 n. 90; Beverley, Hist. of Va., 211; Hening, op. cit., III, 45; VI, 84, 85, etc. Earlier the marriage fee was 2 shillings: ibid., I, 160, 184.

[729] Acts of the Gen. Assembly, 203.

[730] Hening, op. cit., IV, 245 (1730). Marriage with a deceased wife's sister is forbidden: ibid., XII, 689 (1788).

[731] Ibid., I, 252, 253.

[732] Ibid., 438. By this act either the man or the woman suffers a penalty of one year's extra service.

[733] Ibid., II, 114. The penalty for a freeman was made 1,000 pounds of tobacco in 1705: ibid., III, 444.

[734] Ibid., VI, 83, 84.

[735] On this marriage see Winsor, Nar. and Crit. Hist., III, 132; Holmes, Annals, I, 162; Campbell, Hist. of Va., 65.

[736] William Strachey, For the Colony in Virginea Britannea, Lawes Diuine, Morall, and Martiall, 11: in Force, Tracts, III.

[737] Hening, op. cit., I, 240, 310, etc. The following curious judgment was rendered by the governor and council sitting as a court in 1627: "Upon the presentment of the church-wardens of Stanley Hundred for suspicion of incontinency betweene Henry Kinge and the wife of John Jackson, they lyinge together in her husband's absence; it is thought fitt that the sayd Kinge shall remove his habitation from her, and not to use or frequent her company until her husband's return."—Ibid., 145, note. This may be compared with the following record of the same court in 1631: "Because Edw. Grymes lay with Alice West he gives security not to marry any woman till further order from the Governor and Council."—Ibid., 551.