A Companion to Global Gender History. Группа авторов

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A Companion to Global Gender History - Группа авторов


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status, with wealthier households comprising relatives and servants living together in a large compound and smaller, less affluent living in nuclear family units. Whatever a household’s size or composition, everyone living within it was under the authority of the male head of household which, upon his death, passed to the eldest son or other male in the hierarchy.

      Marriages linked social groups, and weddings were central occasions in a family’s life. Spouses were chosen carefully by parents, other family members, or marriage brokers, and much of a family’s resources went toward the ceremony and setting up the new household. Marital agreements, especially among the well‐to‐do, were stipulated with contracts between the families involved, a practice that continued for centuries throughout the world, and in many areas continues today. In China during the Han dynasty (202 BCE–220 CE) marriages involved the exchange of an elaborate trove of betrothal gifts between the families of the bride and groom. A marriage with no betrothal gift or dowry was dishonorable, with the woman often considered a concubine rather than a wife. Once all these goods had been exchanged, the bride was taken to the ancestral home of the groom, where she was expected to obey her husband and his living relatives, and to honor his ancestors. Confucian teachings required upper‐class men to carry out specific rituals honoring their ancestors and clan throughout their lives, and to have sons so that these rituals could continue. Men’s names were inscribed on the official family list, and women’s on the list of their marital families once they had a son (Watson and Ebrey, 1991).

      In the postclassical period (500 CE–1500 CE), philosophical and religious ideals of family honor and sexual propriety led to the seclusion of elite women within their households in China, India, and much of the Islamic world. The vast majority of people in these cultures were not members of the elite, however, but peasants who spent their days raising food. Almost all of them married, not because of Confucian principles or Hindu teachings or Islamic injunctions, but because marital couples and their children were the basic unit of agricultural production and procreation was an economic necessity and not simply a religious duty.

      The religious traditions of the postclassical period developed norms regarding familial relationships that were clearly gendered. In India, for example, Hindu ideas about the importance of family life and having many children meant that all men and women were expected to marry, and that women in particular married very young; widows and women who had not had sons were excluded from wedding festivities. Parents, other relatives, or professional matchmakers chose one’s spouse, and anything that interfered with procreation, including exclusively same‐sex attachments, was frowned upon (Ghosh, 2008). The domestic fire was symbolically important; husband and wife made regular offerings in front of it. Children, particularly boys, were shown great affection and developed close attachments to their parents, especially their mothers. These mothers often continued to live in the house of their eldest son upon widowhood, creating stresses between mothers‐ and daughters‐in‐law; cruel and angry mothers‐in‐law were, and still are, standard figures in the legends and stories of classical India.

      In European family life, the influence of the Christian Church was apparent in rules and customs. Officially the Church declared that consent of the spouses was the basis of marriage and indeed, until the sixteenth century, consent of the spouses was almost all that was required to have a valid marriage. This was an area of contention between the powerful Church and the state, since parents wanted to arrange “suitable” marriages for their offspring and objected to the interference of a priest or bishop who ruled in favor of the marriage partners. Because of its sacramental nature, marriage was increasingly held to be indissoluble, and sexual relations outside of marriage were viewed as illicit. Thus Christian Europe banned polygamy and divorce, and attempted to prohibit any form of sexual relationship apart from marriage, such as concubinage or premarital sex.

      Throughout most of Eurasia in the classical and postclassical periods, a husband’s death brought great changes in a woman’s situation. She became a widow, a word for which there is no male equivalent in many ancient languages and one of the few words in English and other modern languages in which the male, widower, is derived from the female instead of the other way around. In some places widows were secluded or under the control of their sons, but in other places they became more active legally, buying and selling land, making loans, and making donations to religious establishments. A widow’s actions were acceptable because she was often the guardian for her children and in control of the family finances, but she was also somewhat suspect because she was not under direct male control.

      Polygynous marriages were common in many parts of world in a pattern termed “resource polygyny.” Rulers of states and villages had the most wives or other types of female dependents as a sign of status, and they used marriage as a way to make or cement alliances. Resource polygyny could lead to conflict between fathers and sons, as families had to decide whether resources would best be spent acquiring a first wife for a son or another wife for the father. Some scholars have seen this generational conflict as a source for harsh initiation rituals for unmarried young men as a precondition for marriage and joining the ranks of fully adult men. Marriage could also be used as a means of cementing military conquests and absorbing a defeated population. The leaders of both the Incas and the Aztecs, for example, married the daughters of rulers of the groups they had conquered, and in seventeenth‐century Virginia, the Algonkian‐speaking chief Powhatan reinforced his domination of other groups by marrying women from their villages and then sending them back once they had borne him a child. In contrast, African families lived in house‐compounds in which each wife had her own house; each wife also had her own cattle, fields, and property. This notion that a wife’s property actually belonged to her husband, while standard in Europe, was not accepted in most of Africa. In parts of the world in which women were secluded, all wives might live within the same household, in special quarters constructed for them, termed the harim (which means “forbidden area”) or zenana.

      Many cultures in Africa, the Americas, and the Pacific were matrilineal, with property passed down through the female line. This did not necessarily mean that women were economically or legally autonomous, but that they depended on their brothers rather than their husbands. Their brothers also depended on them, however, for many of these cultures also had systems of marriage involving a brideprice. A man could only marry after his sister in order to use the money or goods his family had received as her brideprice to acquire a wife for him. This system encouraged close


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