Spanish law is binding in the Spanish Peninsula and adjacent islands, the Canary Islands and such African territory as is subject to Spain.
Marriage.—The law recognizes two forms of marriage: the canonical, which all who profess the Catholic religion should contract; and the civil, which must be celebrated in the manner hereinafter stated.
Marriage is forbidden to:
1. Minors who have not obtained parental consent.
2. To a widow, during the three hundred and one days following the death of her husband or before childbirth, if she has been left pregnant.
3. To a guardian and his or her descendants, with respect to persons who are the wards of such guardian until the ending of the guardianship, and a proper accounting has been rendered by the guardian. An exception to this rule exists when the father of the ward has in his will or in a public instrument expressly authorized such a marriage.
Age.—A male cannot marry until he has completed his fourteenth year of age; a female until she has completed her twelfth year.
Marriage contracted by persons under puberty shall, nevertheless, be ipso facto made legal if a day after having arrived at the legal age of puberty, the parties continue to live together without bringing a suit to set aside the marriage, or if the female becomes pregnant before the legal age, or before the institution of a suit for annulment.
Persons who are not in the full exercise of their reasoning faculties cannot contract marriage.
The law forbids the marriage of all those who suffer from absolute or relative impotency.