2. Adultery of the husband, if such adultery creates a public scandal or if the husband brings his concubine into the home he has established for his wife.

3. Sentence of one of the spouses to life imprisonment.

4. Cruel and abusive treatment.

Divorce.—Under the law of Portugal as it existed down to the day when King Manuel II. was dethroned and a Republic declared there was no such thing as divorce recognized. Portugal has been for centuries a Catholic country, and the decrees of the Council of Trent, as well as all the other rules and regulations concerning marriage stated by the Catholic Church, have been accepted by Portugal as part of the law of the land. However, since December 1, 1910, when the present provisional government was constituted, certain new laws have been promulgated by government decree. One of these new laws relates to divorce and is most modern and radical in its scope. It permits the courts to grant absolute divorces for a number of reasons, including “mutual consent of the parties.”

Whether such laws, created by proclamation instead of legislation, will be incorporated into the inevitable new Civil Code of Portugal is a problem for the future. Our endeavour in this chapter has been to state the organic law of Portugal as it at present exists, untouched by legislation on the statute books of that ancient land.


CHAPTER XX.

Roumania.

Roumania is the name officially adopted by the united kingdom that comprises the former principalities of Walachia and Moldavia. In its native form it appears simply as “Roumania,” representing the claim to Roman descent put forward by its inhabitants.