Marriage: Difference between revisions

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'''Marriage''' is a contract between two people that indicates that they will come together for the production of offspring. Whilst the ideal was that a marriage was for love, frequently this did not occur amongst the nobility where arranged marriages for political or economic gain were frequent.
'''Marriage''' is a contract between two people that indicates that they will come together for the production of offspring. Whilst the ideal was that a marriage was for love, frequently this did not occur amongst the [[nobility]] where arranged marriages for political or economic gain were frequent.


The promise of faithfulness was generally assumed.
The promise of faithfulness was generally assumed.
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==Dissolving the Contract==
==Dissolving the Contract==
To escape from the marriage contract generally involved one of three scenarios:
To escape from the marriage contract generally involved one of three scenarios:
* the death of one partner
* the [[death]] of one partner
* anullment - Pope Nicholas in declared that a marriage could be annulled if the two parties did not love each other in 853.
* anullment - [[Pope Nicholas]] in declared that a marriage could be annulled if the two parties did not love each other in 853.
* divorce - Early [[Christian]] leaders such as Constantine legalised divorce but by the [[10th century]] the Catholic [[church]] abolished divorce whereever they managed to hold sway.
* divorce - Early [[Christian]] leaders such as [[Constantine]] legalised divorce but by the [[10th century]] the [[Catholic church]] abolished divorce whereever they managed to hold sway.

=== See also ===
* [[wedding]]
* [[wedding clothes]]

Revision as of 00:40, 24 April 2006

Marriage is a contract between two people that indicates that they will come together for the production of offspring. Whilst the ideal was that a marriage was for love, frequently this did not occur amongst the nobility where arranged marriages for political or economic gain were frequent.

The promise of faithfulness was generally assumed.

The Council of Trent in 1563 declared that a marriages were to be celebrated only in the presence of a priest and two witnessses.

Dissolving the Contract

To escape from the marriage contract generally involved one of three scenarios:

See also