Marriage is a social union or legal contract
between individuals that creates
kinship. It
is an institution in which interpersonal relationships, usually
intimate and sexual, are acknowledged by a variety of ways,
depending on the culture or demographic. Such a union may also be
called
matrimony, while the ceremony that marks its
beginning is usually called a
wedding and
the marital structure created is known as
wedlock.
People marry for many reasons, most often including one or more of
the following: legal, social, emotional, economical, spiritual, and
religious. These might include arranged marriages, family
obligations, the legal establishment of a nuclear family unit, the
legal protection of children and public declaration of
love.
Marriage practices are very
diverse across cultures, may take
many forms, and are often formalized by a
ceremony called a
wedding. The act of
marriage usually creates
normative or
legal obligations between the individuals involved. In some
societies these obligations also extend to certain family members
of the married persons. Almost all cultures that recognize marriage
also recognize
adultery as a violation of
the terms of marriage.
External recognition can manifest in a variety of ways. Some
examples include the
state, a
religious authority, or both. It is often viewed as a
contract. Civil marriage is the legal concept of
marriage as a governmental institution irrespective of religious
affiliation, in accordance with
marriage
laws of the jurisdiction. If recognized by the state, by the
religion(s) to which the parties belong or by society in general,
the act of marriage changes the personal and social status of the
individuals who enter into it.
Definitions
According to
Confucius, "Marriage is the
union (of the representatives) of two different surnames, in
friendship and in love, in order to continue the posterity of the
former sages, and to furnish those who shall preside at the
sacrifices to heaven and earth, at those in the ancestral temple,
and at those at the altars to the spirits of the land and
grain."
In
lexicography, words have often
changed and expanded in accordance to the
status quo. According to the first edition of
Webster's Dictionary of the English Language published in 1806,
marriage was defined as "the act of joining man and woman..."
although this failed to recognize other types of marriages, such as
Polygyny,
Polyandry, etc
By 2009, all major English language dictionaries dropped gender
specifications, or supplemented them with secondary definitions to
include gender-neutral language or same-sex unions.
Anthropological definitions
Anthropologists have proposed several competing definitions of
marriage that attempting to encompass the wide variety of marital
practices observed across cultures. In his book
The History of
Human Marriage (1921),
Edvard
Westermarck defined marriage as "a more or less durable
connection between male and female, lasting beyond the mere act of
propagation till after the birth of the offspring," but he later
rejected this definition.
The anthropological handbook
Notes and Queries (1951)
defined marriage as "a union between a man and a woman such that
children born to the woman are the recognized legitimate offspring
of both partners." In recognition of a practice by the Nuer of
Sudan allowing women to act as a husband in certain circumstances,
Kathleen Gough suggested modifying
this to "a woman and one or more other persons."
Edmund Leach criticized Gough's
definition for being too restrictive in terms of recognized
legitimate offspring and suggested that marriage be viewed in terms
of the different types of rights it serves to establish. Leach
expanded the definition and proposed that "Marriage is a
relationship established between a woman and one or more other
persons, which provides that a child born to the woman under
circumstances not prohibited by the rules of the relationship, is
accorded full birth-status rights common to normal members of his
society or social stratum" Leach argued that no one definition of
marriage applied to all cultures. He offered a list of ten rights
associated with marriage, including sexual monopoly and rights with
respect to children, with specific rights differing across
cultures.
Duran Bell also criticized the legitimacy-based definition on the
basis that some societies do not require marriage for legitimacy,
arguing that in societies where illegitimacy means only that the
mother is unmarried and has no other legal implications, a
legitimacy-based definition of marriage is circular. He proposed
defining marriage in terms of sexual access rights.
Etymology
The modern English word "marriage" derives from
Middle English mariage, which first
appears in 1250-1300 C.E. This in turn is derived from
Old French marier (to marry) and
ultimately
Latin marītāre (to marry)
and
marītus (of marriage).
History
Although the institution of marriage pre-dates reliable
recorded history, many cultures have
legends concerning the origins of marriage. Edvard Westermarck
proposed that "the institution of marriage has probably developed
out of a primeval habit" of mating and child rearing that was
subsequently sanctioned by custom and then by law. The way in which
a marriage is conducted has changed over time, as has the
institution itself.
One of the oldest known and recorded marriage laws is discerned
from
Hammurabi's Code, enacted in
ancient
Mesopotamia (widely considered
as the
cradle of
civilization). The legal institution of marriage and its rules
and ramifications have changed over time depending on the culture
or demographic of the time.
Various cultures have had their own theories on the origin of
marriage. One example may lie in a man's need for assurance as to
paternity of his children. He might therefore be willing to pay a
bride price or provide for a woman in exchange for exclusive sexual
access. Legitimacy is the consequence of this transaction rather
than its motivation. In
Comanche society,
married women work harder, lose sexual freedom, and do not seem to
obtain any benefit from marriage. But nubile women are a source of
jealousy and strife in the tribe, so they are given little choice
other than to get married. "In almost all societies, access to
women is institutionalized in some way so as to moderate the
intensity of this competition."In
English common law, a marriage was a
voluntary
contract by a man and a woman,
where by agreement they choose to become husband and wife.
European marriages
For most of
European history,
marriage was more or less a business agreement between two families
who arranged the marriages of their children. Romantic love, and
even simple affection, were not considered essential. Historically,
the perceived necessity of marriage has been stressed.
In
Ancient Greece, no specific civil
ceremony was required for the creation of a marriage - only mutual
agreement and the fact that the couple must regard each other as
husband and wife accordingly. Men usually married when they were in
their 20s or 30s and expected their wives to be in their early
teens. It has been suggested that these ages made sense for the
Greek because men were generally done with military service by age
30, and marrying a young girl ensured her virginity. Married Greek
women had few rights in ancient Greek society and were expected to
take care of the house and children. Time was an important factor
in Greek marriage. For example, there were superstitions that being
married during a
full moon was good luck
and, according to
Robert
Flacelière, Greeks married in the winter. Inheritance was more
important than feelings: A woman whose father dies without male
heirs can be forced to marry her nearest male relative—even if she
has to divorce her husband first.
Like with the Greeks,
Roman marriage
and divorce required no specific government or religious approval.
Both marriage and divorce could happen by simple mutual agreement.
There were several types of marriages in Roman society. The
traditional ("conventional") form called
conventio in
manum required a ceremony with witnesses and was also
dissolved with a ceremony. In this type of marriage, a woman lost
her family rights of inheritance of her old family and gained them
with her new one. She now was subject to the authority of her
husband. There was the free marriage known as
sine manu.
In this arrangement, the wife remained a member of her original
family; she stayed under the authority of her father, kept her
family rights of inheritance with her old family and did not gain
any with the new family. A law in the
Theodosian Code (
C. Th.
9.7.3) issued in 342 CE prohibited same-sex marriage, but the exact
intent of the law and its relation to social practice is unclear,
as only a few documented examples of same-sex marriage in ancient
Rome exist.
the
early Christian era (30 to 325
CE), marriage was thought of as primarily a private matter, with no
religious or other ceremony being required. Marriage in
sixth-century
Europe has been characterized
as political polygamy. The Germanic warlord Clothar, despite being
a baptized Christian, eventually acquired four wives for strategic
reasons, including his dead brother's wife, her sister and the
daughter of a captured foreign king.
In the twelfth century, aristocrats believed love was incompatible
with marriage and sought romance in adultery.
Troubadors invented
courtly love which involved secret but
chaste trysts between a lover and a beloved.
In fourteenth-century Europe, ordinary people could no longer
choose whom to marry. The lord of one Black Forest manor decreed in
1344 that all his unmarried tenants—including widows and
widowers—marry spouses of his choosing. Elsewhere, peasants wishing
to pick a partner had to pay a fee.
With few local exceptions, until 1545, Christian marriages in
Europe were by mutual consent, declaration of intention to marry
and upon the subsequent physical union of the parties. The couple
would promise verbally to each other that they would be married to
each other; the presence of a priest or witnesses was not required.
This promise was known as the "verbum." If freely given and made in
the present tense (e.g., "I marry you"), it was unquestionably
binding; if made in the future tense ("I will marry you"), it would
constitute a
betrothal. One of the
functions of churches from the
Middle
Ages was to register marriages, which was not obligatory. There
was no state involvement in marriage and personal status, with
these issues being adjudicated in
ecclesiastical courts.
The average age of marriage in the late 1200s into the 1500s was
around 25 years of age. Beginning in the 1500s it was unlawful for
a woman younger than 20 years of age to marry.
As part of the
Counter-Reformation, in 1563 the
Council of Trent decreed that a
Roman Catholic marriage would be
recognized only if the marriage ceremony was officiated by a priest
with two witnesses. The Council also authorized a
Catechism, issued in 1566, which defined marriage
as, "The conjugal union of man and woman, contracted between two
qualified persons, which obliges them to live together throughout
life."
In England, under the Anglican Church, marriage by consent and
cohabitation was valid until the passage of Lord Hardwicke's Act in
1753. This act instituted certain requirements for marriage,
including the performance of a religious ceremony observed by
witnesses.
As part of the Reformation, the role of recording marriages and
setting the rules for marriage passed to the state. By the 1600s
many of the
Protestant European
countries had a state involvement in marriage. As of 2000, the
average marriage age range was 25–44 years for men and 22–39 years
for women.
Recognition by the state
In the
early modern period,
John Calvin and his
Protestant colleagues reformulated Christian
marriage by enacting the Marriage Ordinance of Geneva, which
imposed "The dual requirements of state registration and church
consecration to constitute marriage" for recognition.
In
England
and Wales
, Lord
Hardwicke's Marriage Act 1753
required a formal ceremony of marriage, thereby curtailing the
practice of Fleet Marriage.
These were clandestine or irregular marriages performed at Fleet
Prison, and at hundreds of other places. From the 1690s until the
Marriage Act of 1753 as many as 300,000 clandestine marriages were
performed at Fleet Prison alone. The Act required a marriage
ceremony to be officiated by an Anglican priest in the
Anglican Church with two witnesses and
registration. The Act did not apply to Jewish marriages or those of
Quakers, whose marriages continued to be governed by their own
customs.
In England and Wales, since 1837, civil marriages have been
recognised as a legal alternative to church marriages under the
Marriage Act of 1836.
In Germany
, civil
marriages were recognised in 1875. This law permitted a
declaration of the marriage before an official clerk of the civil
administration, when both spouses affirm their will to marry, to
constitute a legally recognised valid and effective marriage, and
allowed an optional private clerical marriage ceremony.
Chinese marriage
The mythological origin of Chinese marriage is a story about
Nüwa and
Fu Xi who
invented proper marriage procedures after becoming married.
In ancient Chinese society, people of the same surname were not
supposed to marry and doing so was seen as incest. However, because
marriage to one's maternal relatives was not thought of as incest,
families sometimes intermarried from one generation to another.
Over time, Chinese people became more geographically mobile.
Individuals remained members of their biological families. When a
couple died, the husband and the wife were buried separately in the
respective clans’ graveyard. In a maternal marriage, a male would
become a son-in-law who lived in the wife’s home.
Same-sex marriage
Various types of same-sex marriages have existed, ranging from
informal, unsanctioned relationships to highly ritualized
unions.
While it is a relatively new practice that same-sex couples are
being granted the same form of legal marital recognition as
commonly used by mixed-sexed couples, recent publicity and debate
over the past decade gives an impression that civil marriage for
lesbian and gay couples is novel and untested. There is a long
history of recorded same-sex relationships around the world.
It is
believed that same-sex unions were celebrated in Ancient Greece and
Rome, some regions of China, such as Fujian
, and at
certain times in ancient European history. A law in the
Theodosian Code (
C.
Th. 9.7.3) issued in AD 342 prohibited same-sex marriage
in ancient Rome, but the exact intent of the law and its relation
to social practice is unclear, as only a few examples of same-sex
marriage in that culture exist.
Selection of a partner
The selection of a marriage partner may involve either the couple
going through a selection process of
courtship or the marriage may be
arranged by the couple's parents or an
outside party, a
matchmaker.
A pragmatic (or 'arranged') marriage is made easier by formal
procedures of family or group politics. A responsible authority
sets up or encourages the marriage; they may, indeed, engage a
professional
matchmaker to find a
suitable spouse for an unmarried person. The authority figure could
be parents, family, a religious official, or a group
consensus.
In some cases, the authority figure may choose a match for purposes
other than marital harmony.
In rural Indian villages,
child
marriage is also practiced, with parents at times arranging the
wedding, sometimes even before the child is born. This practice is
now illegal under the Child Marriage Restraint Act.
In some societies ranging from
Central
Asia to the
Caucasus to
Africa, the custom of
bride kidnapping still exists, in which a
woman is captured by a man and his friends. Sometimes this covers
an
elopement, but sometimes it depends on
sexual violence. In previous times,
raptio was a larger-scale version of
this, with groups of women captured by groups of men, sometimes in
war; the most famous example is
The Rape of the Sabine Women,
which provided the first citizens of Rome with their wives.
Other marriage partners are more or less imposed on an individual.
For example,
widow inheritance
provides a widow with another man from her late husband's
brothers.
Marriage ceremony

Couple married in a Shinto ceremony in
Takayama, Gifu prefecture.
A marriage is usually formalised at a
wedding or marriage ceremony. The ceremony may be
officiated either by a religious official, by a government official
or by a state approved celebrant. In many European and some Latin
American countries, any religious ceremony must be held separately
from the required civil ceremony.
Some countries such as Belgium
, Bulgaria
, France
, the
Netherlands
, Romania
and Turkey
require that
a civil ceremony take place before any religious one.
In some
countries notably the United States
, Canada
, the
United
Kingdom
, the Republic of Ireland
, Norway
and Spain
both
ceremonies can be held together; the officiant at the religious and
civil ceremony also serving as agent of the state to perform the
civil ceremony. To avoid any implication that the state is
"recognizing" a religious marriage (which is prohibited in some
countries) the "civil" ceremony is said to be taking place at the
same time as the religious ceremony. Often this involves simply
signing a register during the religious ceremony. If the civil
element of the religious ceremony is omitted, the marriage is not
recognised by government under the law.
While some countries, such as
Australia,
permit marriages to be held in private and at any location, others,
including
England and Wales,
require that the civil ceremony be conducted in a place open to the
public and specially sanctioned by law. In England, the place of
marriage need no longer be a church or
register office, but could also be a hotel,
historic building or other venue that has obtained the necessary
licence. An exception can be made in the case of marriage by
special emergency license, which is normally granted only when one
of the parties is terminally ill. Rules about where and when
persons can marry vary from place to place. Some regulations
require that one of the parties reside in the locality of the
registry office.
Within the parameters set by the law of the jurisdiction in which a
marriage or wedding takes place, each religious authority has rules
for the manner in which weddings are to be conducted by their
officials and members.
Cohabitation
Marriage is an institution which can join together people's lives
in a variety of
emotional and
economic ways. In many Western cultures, marriage
usually leads to the formation of a new household comprising the
married couple, with the married couple living together in the same
home, often sharing the same bed, but in some other cultures this
is not the tradition.
Among the Minangkabau of West Sumatra
, residency after marriage is matrilocal, with the husband moving into the
household of his wife's mother. Residency after marriage can
also be
patrilocal or
avunculocal. Also, in southwestern
China,
walking marriages, in which
the husband and wife do not live together, have been a traditional
part of the
Mosuo culture. Walking marriages
have also been increasingly common in modern
Beijing. Guo Jianmei, director of the center for
women's studies at Beijing University, told a
Newsday correspondent, "Walking marriages reflect
sweeping changes in Chinese society."
A similar arrangement
in Saudi
Arabia
, called misyar
marriage, also involves the husband and wife living separately
but meeting regularly.
Conversely, marriage is not a prerequisite for
cohabitation. In some cases couples living
together do not wish to be recognised as married, such as when
pension or alimony rights are adversely affected, or because of
taxation consideration, or because of immigration issues, and for
many other reasons. In modern western societies some couples
cohabitate before marriage to test whether such an arrangement
might work in the long term.
In some cases cohabitation may constitute a common-law marriage,
and in some countries the laws recognise cohabitation in preference
to the formality of marriage for taxation and social security
benefits. This is the case, for example, in
Australia.
Sex and procreation
Some married couples choose not to have children and so remain
childfree. Others are unable to have
children due to
infertility or other
factors preventing
conception
or the bearing of children. In some cultures, marriage imposes an
obligation on women to bear children.
In northern Ghana
, for
example, payment of bridewealth
signifies a woman's requirement to bear children, and women using
birth control face substantial threats of physical abuse and
reprisals.
On the other hand, marriage is not a prerequisite for having
children. In the United States, the National Center for Health
Statistics reported that in 1992, 30.1 percent of births were to
unmarried women. In 2006, that number had risen to 38.5 percent.
Until recently, children born outside of marriage were known as
illegitimate and suffered legal
disadvantages and
social
stigma. In recent years the legal relevance of illegitimacy has
declined and social acceptance has increased, especially in western
countries. In the United States, the highest judicial body ruled in
the case
Griswold v.
Connecticut that procreation
within marriage could be abridged by artificial insemination.
Many of the world's major religions look with disfavor on
sexual relations outside of marriage.
Many non
secular states, mostly with Muslim
majorities, sanction criminal penalties for
sexual intercourse before marriage. Sexual
relations by a married person with someone other than his/her
spouse is known as
adultery and is also
frequently disapproved by the major world religions (some calling
it a
sin). Adultery is considered in many
jurisdictions to be a crime and grounds for divorce. (See
adultery.)
Marriage law
Marriage is an institution that is historically filled with
restrictions. From age, to race, to sexual orientation, to gender,
to social status, restrictions are placed on marriage by society
for reasons of benefiting the children, passing on healthy genes,
to keep property concentrated, or because of
prejudice and
fear. Almost all
cultures that recognize marriage also recognize
adultery as a violation of the terms of
marriage.
The United States has had a history of marriage restriction laws.
Many states enacted
miscegenation laws
which were first introduced in the late seventeenth century in the
slave-holding colonies of Virginia (1691) and Maryland (1692) and
lasted until 1967 (until it was overturned via Loving v. Virginia).
Many of these states restricted several minorities from marrying
whites. For example, Alabama, Arkansas, and Oklahoma banned Blacks
in particular. States such as Mississippi and Missouri banned
Blacks and Asians. States such as North Carolina and South Carolina
banned Blacks and Native Americans, and some states such as
Georgia, South Carolina, and Virginia banned all non-whites.
Current federal law specifies marriage to be a union of one man and
one woman. The 1996
Defense of
Marriage Act (DOMA) allows states to ignore same-sex unions
from other states and bars the federal government from granting
marriage benefits to couples in such unions. Opposition to the
recognition of
Deseret as a State by the
Federal government was founded on opposition to the once-practised
Polygamous marriages of
Mormons.
Forty-one US states currently have statutory Defense of Marriage
Acts. Three of those states have statutory language that pre-dates
DOMA (enacted before 1996) defining marriage as between a man and a
woman. Thirty states have defined marriage in their constitutions.
Arizona is the only state that has ever defeated a constitutional
amendment defining marriage between a man and a woman (2006), but
subsequently passed one in 2008.
Societies have often placed restrictions on marriage to relatives,
though the degree of prohibited relationship varies widely. In many
societies, marriage between brothers and sisters has been
forbidden. Roman law, for example, enforced marriage as a "union of
man and woman and the inseparable association of their lives." Some
mainstream religions prohibit some marriages on the basis of the
consanguinity (lineal descent) and
affinity (kinship by marriage) of the
prospective marriage partners, though the standards have varied and
changed over time.
Common-law marriage
In some jurisdictions but not all, marriage relationships may be
created by the operation of the law alone, as in
common-law marriage, sometimes called
"marriage by habit and repute (cohabitation)." A
de
facto common-law marriage without a license or ceremony is
legally binding in some jurisdictions but has no legal consequence
in others.
Rights and obligations
A marriage bestows rights and obligations on the married parties,
and sometimes on
relatives as well, being
the sole mechanism for the creation of
affinal ties (in-laws). These may
include:
- Giving a husband/wife or his/her family control over a spouse’s
sexual services, labor, and property.
- Giving a husband/wife responsibility for a spouse’s debts.
- Giving a husband/wife visitation rights when his/her spouse is
incarcerated or hospitalized.
- Giving a husband/wife control over his/her spouse’s affairs
when the spouse is incapacitated.
- Establishing the second legal
guardian of a parent’s child.
- Establishing a joint fund of
property for the benefit of children.
- Establishing a relationship between the families of the
spouses.
These rights and obligations vary considerably between societies,
and between groups within society.
Marriage restrictions
Marriage is an institution that is historically filled with
restrictions. From age, to gender, to social status, restrictions
are placed on marriage by society for reasons of benefiting the
children, passing on healthy genes, to keep property concentrated,
or because of
prejudice and
fear.
Some
legal,
social, or
religious restrictions apply in some
countries on the genders of the couple. In response to changing
social and political attitudes, some jurisdictions and
religious denominations now recognize
marriages between people of the same sex. In some jurisdictions
these are sometimes called
civil unions
or
domestic partnerships, while
some others explicitly prohibit same-sex marriages.
Societies have often placed restrictions on marriage to relatives,
though the degree of prohibited relationship varies widely. In most
societies, marriage between brothers and sisters has been
forbidden. All mainstream religions prohibit some marriages on the
basis of the
consanguinity (lineal
descent) and
affinity (kinship by
marriage) of the prospective marriage partners, though the
standards vary.
Even though in some places marital relationships did not have to be
officially registered, there have been countless restrictions
placed on marriage by different societies throughout human history.
Restrictions against polygamy and marrying within a particular
group or race have been common. Many societies, even some with a
cultural tradition of polygamy, recognize
monogamy as the only valid form of marriage. Many
societies have also adopted other restrictions on whom one can
marry, such as prohibitions of marrying persons with the same
surname, or persons with the same sacred animal. Societies have
also at times required marriage from within a certain group.
Anthropologists refer to these restrictions as
endogamy. An example of such restrictions would be
a requirement to marry someone from the same tribe.
State recognition
In many jurisdictions, a civil marriage may take place as part of
the religious marriage ceremony, although they are theoretically
distinct. Some jurisdictions allow civil marriages in circumstances
which are notably not allowed by particular religions, such as
same-sex marriages or
civil unions.
Marriage and religion
All mainstream religions have strong views relating to marriage.
Most religions perform a wedding ceremony to solemnize the
beginning of a marriage.
Christianity
Christians believe that marriage is a gift from God, one that
should not be taken for granted. They variously regard it as a
sacrament, a contract, a sacred institution, or a covenant. From
the very beginning of the Christian Church, marriage law and
theology have been a major matter. The foundation of the Western
tradition of Christian marriages have been the teachings of
Jesus Christ and the
Apostle Paul.
Christians often marry for religious reasons ranging from following
the biblical injunction for a "man to leave his father and mother
and cleave to his wife, and the two shall become one," to obeying
Canon Law stating marriage between baptized persons is a
sacrament.
Divorce is not encouraged. Most Protestant churches allow people to
marry again after a divorce. In the Roman Catholic Church, marriage
can only be ended by an
annulment where the Church for
special reasons regards it as never having taken place.
Liturgical Christianity
Anglicans,
Catholics, and
Eastern
Orthodox consider marriage termed
holy matrimony to be
an expression of
divine grace, termed a
sacrament or
mystery. Roman Catholics consider
marriage between baptized persons a
sacrament. In
Western ritual, the ministers of the sacrament
are the husband and wife themselves, with a
bishop,
priest, or
deacon merely witnessing the union on behalf of the
church, and adding a blessing. In
Eastern ritual churches, the bishop or
priest functions as the actual minister of the Sacred Mystery
(Eastern Orthodox deacons may not perform marriages). Western
Christians commonly refer to marriage as a
vocation, while Eastern Christians consider it an
ordination and a
martyrdom, though the theological emphases indicated
by the various names are not excluded by the teachings of either
tradition. Marriage is commonly celebrated in the context of a
Eucharistic service (a
nuptial Mass or
Divine Liturgy). The sacrament of marriage is
indicative of the relationship between
Christ
and the Church.
The Roman Catholic tradition of the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries defined marriage as a
sacrament.
Marriage is one of the seven sacraments of the Catholic Church.
According to the Church's Catechism, "the spouses as ministers of
Christ's grace mutually confer upon each other the sacrament of
Matrimony by expressing their consent before the Church." In
Catholicism, a principle objective of marriage is procreation:
"[e]ntering marriage with the intention of never having children is
a grave wrong and more than likely grounds for an annulment."
According to current Catholic legislation governing marriage, "The
essential properties of marriage are unity and indissolubility; in
Christian marriage they acquire a distinctive firmness by reason of
the sacrament.
Protestantism
Protestant denominations see the
primary purpose of marriage to be to glorify God by demonstrating
his love to the world. Other purposes of marriage include intimate
companionship, rearing children and mutual support for both husband
and wife to fulfill their life callings. Protestants generally
approve of
birth control and consider
marital sexual pleasure to be a gift of God.
Most Reformed Christians would deny the elevation of marriage to
the status of a sacrament, nevertheless it is considered a covenant
between spouses before God.
cf.
Historically, five competing models of marriage in Christianity
have shaped Western marriage and legal tradition:
- The Protestant Reformationists replaced the Roman
Catholic sacramental model.
- Martin Luther saw it as a social
"estate of the earthly kingdom…subject to the prince, not the
Pope."
- John Calvin taught that marriage was
a covenant of grace that required the coercive power of
the state to preserve its integrity. Anglicans regarded it as a
domestic commonwealth within
England and the church.
- By the seventeenth century, Anglican theologians had begun to
develop a theology of marriage to replace the sacramental model of
marriage. These "regarded the interlocking commonwealths of state,
church, and family as something of an earthly form of heavenly
government."
- The secularism of the Enlightenment emphasized marriage as a
contract "to be formed, maintained, and dissolved as the
couple sees fit."
John Witte, Professor of Law and director of the Law and Religion
Program at Emory University, warns that contemporary liberal
attitudes toward marriage ultimately will produce a family that is
"haphazardly bound together in the common pursuit of selfish
ends."
Latter-day Saints
Members of
the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) believe that "marriage
between a man and a woman is ordained of God and that the family is
central to the Creator's plan for the eternal destiny of His
children." The LDS belief is that marriage between a man and a
woman can last beyond death and into eternity.
Judaism
In
Judaism, marriage is viewed as a
contractual bond commanded by God in which a man and a woman come
together to create a relationship in which God is directly
involved. Though procreation is not the sole purpose, a Jewish
marriage is also expected to fulfill the commandment to have
children. The main focus centers around the relationship between
the husband and wife.
Kabbalistically,
marriage is understood to mean that the husband and wife are
merging together into a single soul. This is why a man is
considered "incomplete" if he is not married, as his soul is only
one part of a larger whole that remains to be unified.
Islam

A Muslim bride of Pakistan origin
signing the
nikkah nama or marriage certificate.
Islam also commends marriage, with the age of
marriage being whenever the individuals feel ready, financially and
emotionally.
In Islam,
polygamy is allowed for men, with
the specific
limitation that they
can only have up to four wives at any one time, given the religious
requirement that they are able to and willing to partition their
time and wealth equally among the respective wives.
For a Muslim wedding to take place, the bride and her guardian must
both agree on the marriage. Should either the guardian or the girl
disagree on the marriage, it may not legally take place. In
essence, while the guardian/father of the girl has no right to
force her to marry, he has the right to stop a marriage from taking
place, given that his reasons are valid. The professed purpose of
this practice is to ensure that a woman finds a suitable partner
whom she has chosen not out of sheer emotion.
From an Islamic (Shari'Ah) law perspective, the minimum
requirements and responsibilities in a Muslim marriage are that the
groom provide living expenses (housing, clothing, food,
maintenance) to the bride, and in return, the bride's main
responsibility is raising children to be proper muslims.. All other
rights and responsibilities are to be decided between the husband
and wife, and may even be included as stipulations in the marriage
contract before the marriage actually takes place, so long as they
do not go against the minimum requirements of the marriage.In
Shia Islam marriage must take place in
the presence of at least two reliable witnesses, with the consent
of the guardian of the bride and the consent of both spouses
(including the girl). Following the marriage, the couple is
immediately allowed to consummate the marriage. To create a
religious contract between them, it is sufficient that a man and a
woman indicate an intention to marry each other and recite the
requisite words in front of a Muslim priest The wedding party can
be held days, or months later, whenever the couple and their
families want to announce the marriage in public..
In
Sunni Islam, marriage must take place
in the presence of witnesses, with the consent of the bride and the
consent of both spouses (including the girl). Following the
marriage they may consummate their marriage.
Bahá'í
In the
Bahá'í Faith marriage
is encouraged and viewed as a mutually strengthening bond, but is
not obligatory. A
Bahá'í
marriage requires the couple to choose each other, and then the
consent of all living parents.
Hinduism
Hinduism sees marriage as a sacred duty
that entails both religious and social obligations. Old Hindu
literature in
Sanskrit gives many different
types of marriages and their categorization ranging from "Gandharva
Vivaha" (instant marriage by mutual consent of participants only,
without any need for even a single third person as witness) to
normal (present day) marriages, to "Rakshasa Vivaha" ("demoniac"
marriage, performed by abduction of one participant by the other
participant, usually, but not always, with the help of other
persons). Hindu
widows cannot remarry.
Sikhism
In a Sikh marriage, the couple make rounds around the holy book
called Guru Granth Sahib four times and the holy man speaks some
words from the Guru Granth Sahib in the form of kirtan. The
ceremony is known as 'Anand Karaj' and represents the holy union of
between two souls that are united as one.
Same-sex marriage
For the most part, religious traditions in the world reserve
marriage to heterosexual unions, but there are exceptions including
Unitarian Universalist,
Metropolitan Community
Church,
Quaker,
United Church of Canada,
United Church of Christ and
Reform Jewish congregations, and some
Anglican
dioceses. This model is currently recognized by various
jurisdictions and
religious
denominations.
Financial considerations
The financial aspects of marriage vary between cultures and have
changed over time.
In some cultures, dowries and bride prices continue to be required
today. In both cases, the financial arrangements are usually made
between the groom (or his family) and the bride's family; with the
bride in many cases not being involved in the arrangement, and
often not having a choice in whether to participate in the
marriage.
In
Early Modern Britain, the
social status of the couple was supposed to be equal. After the
marriage, all the property (called "fortune") and expected
inheritances of the
wife belonged to the
husband.
Dowry
A
dowry was not an unconditional gift, but was
usually a part of a wider marriage settlement. For example, if the
groom had other children, they could not inherit the dowry, which
had to go to the bride's children. In the event of her
childlessness, the dowry had to be returned to her family, but
sometimes not until the groom's death or remarriage.
In some cultures, dowries continue to be required today (for
example, in Sudan), while some countries impose restrictions on the
payment of dowry.
In India
, nearly
7,000 women are killed annually in disputes over dowries, and
activists believe that figures represent only a third of the actual
number of such murders.
Bride price and dower
In other cultures, the groom or his family were expected to pay a
bride price to the bride's family for
the right to marry the daughter, or
dower,
which was payable to the bride. This required the groom to work for
the bride's family for a set period of time.
In the Jewish tradition, the rabbis in ancient times insisted on
the marriage couple entering into a marriage contact, called a
ketubah. Besides other things, the
ketubah provided for an amount to be paid by the husband
in the event of a
divorce or
his estate in the event of his death. This amount was a replacement
of the biblical
dower or
bride price, which was payable at the time of
the marriage by the groom to the bride or her parents. This
innovation was put in place because the biblical bride price
created a major social problem: many young prospective husbands
could not raise the bride price at the time when they would
normally be expected to marry. So, to enable these young men to
marry, the rabbis, in effect, delayed the time that the amount
would be payable, when they would be more likely to have the sum.
It may also be noted that both the dower and the
ketubah
amounts served the same purpose: the protection for the wife should
her support cease, either by death or divorce. The only difference
between the two systems was the timing of the payment. It is the
predecessor to the wife's present-day entitlement to
maintenance in the event of the breakup of marriage,
and family maintenance in the event of the husband not providing
adequately for the wife in his
will.
Another function performed by the
ketubah amount was to
provide a disincentive for the husband contemplating divorcing his
wife: he would need to have the amount to be able to pay to the
wife.
Morning gifts, which might also be
arranged by the bride's father rather than the bride, are given to
the bride herself; the name derives from the Germanic tribal custom
of giving them the morning after the wedding night. She might have
control of this morning gift during the lifetime of her husband,
but is entitled to it when widowed. If the amount of her
inheritance is settled by law rather than agreement, it may be
called
dower. Depending on legal systems and
the exact arrangement, she may not be entitled to dispose of it
after her death, and may lose the property if she remarries.
Morning gifts were preserved for many centuries in
morganatic marriage, a union where the
wife's inferior social status was held to prohibit her children
from inheriting a noble's titles or estates. In this case, the
morning gift would support the wife and children. Another legal
provision for widowhood was
jointure, in
which property, often land, would be held in joint tenancy, so that
it would automatically go to the widow on her husband's
death.
Islamic tradition has similar practices. A '
mahr', either immediate or deferred, is the woman's
portion of the groom's wealth (divorce) or estate (death). These
amounts are usually set based on the groom's own and family wealth
and incomes, but in some parts these are set very high so as to
provide a disincentive for the groom exercising the divorce, or the
husband's family 'inheriting' a large portion of the estate,
especially if there are no male offspring from the marriage. In
some countries, including Iran, the
mahr or
alimony can amount to more than a man can ever hope to earn,
sometimes up to US$1,000,000 (4000 official Iranian gold coins). If
the husband cannot pay the
mahr, either in case
of a divorce or on demand, according to the current laws in Iran,
he will have to pay it by installments. Failure to pay the
mahr might even lead to imprisonment.
Modern customs
In many countries today, each marriage partner has the choice of
keeping his or her property separate or combining properties. In
the latter case, called
community
property, when the marriage ends by
divorce each owns half. In many legal jurisdictions,
laws related to property and
inheritance
provide by default for property to pass upon the death of one party
in a marriage firstly to the spouse and secondly to the children.
Wills and
trusts
can make alternative provisions for property succession.
In some legal systems, the partners in a marriage are "jointly
liable" for the debts of the marriage. This has a basis in a
traditional legal notion called the "Doctrine of Necessities"
whereby a husband was responsible to provide necessary things for
his wife. Where this is the case, one partner may be sued to
collect a debt for which they did not expressly contract. Critics
of this practice note that debt collection agencies can abuse this
by claiming an unreasonably wide range of debts to be expenses of
the marriage. The cost of defence and the burden of proof is then
placed on the non-contracting party to prove that the expense is
not a debt of the family. The respective maintenance obligations,
both during and eventually after a marriage, are regulated in most
jurisdictions;
alimony is one such method.
Some have attempted to analyse the institution of marriage using
economic theory; for example,
anarcho-capitalist economist
David Friedman has written a lengthy and
controversial study of marriage as a market transaction (the market
for husbands and wives).
Taxation
In some countries, spouses are allowed to average their incomes;
this is advantageous to a married couple with disparate incomes. To
compensate for this somewhat, many countries provide a
higher tax bracket for the
averaged income of a married couple. While income averaging might
still benefit a married couple with a stay-at-home spouse, such
averaging would cause a married couple with roughly equal personal
incomes to pay more total tax than they would as two single
persons. This is commonly called the
marriage penalty.
Moreover, when the rates applied by the tax code are not based on
averaging the incomes, but rather on the
sum of
individuals' incomes, higher rates will definitely apply to each
individual in a two-earner households in progressive tax systems.
This is most often the case with high-income taxpayers and is
another situation where some consider there to be a marriage
penalty.
Conversely, when progressive tax is levied on the individual with
no consideration for the partnership, dual-income couples fare much
better than single-income couples with similar household incomes.
The effect can be increased when the welfare system treats the same
income as a shared income thereby denying welfare access to the
non-earning spouse. Such systems apply in Australia and Canada, for
example.
Other considerations
Sometimes people marry for purely pragmatic reasons, sometimes
called a
marriage of
convenience or sham marriage. For example, according to one
publisher of information about "green card" marriages, "Every year
over 450,000 United States citizens marry foreign-born individuals
and petition for them to obtain a permanent residency (Green Card)
in the United States." While this is likely an over-estimate, in
2003 alone 184,741 immigrants were admitted to the U.S. as spouses
of U.S. citizens.
Some people want to marry a person with higher or lower status than
them. Others want to marry people who have similar status.
Hypergyny refers to the act of seeking out those
who are of slightly higher social status. In most cases, hypergyny
refers to women wanting men of higher status.
Isogyny
refers to the act of seeking out those who are of similar
status.
Termination
In most societies, the
death of one of the
partners terminates the marriage, and in monogamous societies this
allows the other partner to remarry, though sometimes after a
waiting or mourning period.
Many societies also provide for the termination of marriage through
divorce. Marriages can also be
annulled in some societies, where an authority
declares that a marriage never happened. In either event the people
concerned are free to remarry (or marry). After divorce, one spouse
may have to pay
alimony.
Several cultures have practiced temporary and conditional
marriages. Examples include the
Celtic practice
of
handfasting and fixed-term marriages
in the Muslim community. Pre-Islamic Arabs practiced a form of
temporary marriage that carries on today in the practice of
Nikah Mut'ah, a fixed-term marriage
contract.
Muslim
controversies related to Nikah Mut'ah have resulted in the
practice being confined mostly to
Shi'ite communities.
Statistics
In the United States, 90% of children born in 1970, were to married
parents. In 2008, the rate was 60%. For people aged 20 to 54, 78.6%
were married in 1970. In 2008, this was 57.2%. First marriages that
remained intact was 77.4% in 1970. This was 61.2% in 2008. A
researcher believes that increases in divorce and out-of-wedlock
childbirth have contributed most to the decline in marriage in the
past half-century.
Societal considerations
A researcher claims that children who grow up in homes where
parents are married to one another are less likely to be
impoverished, to have emotional or behavioral problems, to engage
in premature sexual relations, to use drugs, or to commit
suicide.
Post-marital residence
Early theories explaining the determinants of postmarital residence
(e.g.,
Lewis Henry Morgan,
Edward Tylor, or
George Peter Murdock) connected it with
the sexual division of labor. However, to date,
cross-cultural tests of this
hypothesis using worldwide samples have failed to
find any significant relationship between these two variables.
However,
Korotayev's tests show that the
female contribution to subsistence does correlate significantly
with matrilocal residence in general; however, this correlation is
masked by a general polygyny factor. Although an increase in the
female contribution to subsistence tends to lead to matrilocal
residence, it also tends simultaneously to lead to general
non-sororal
polygyny which effectively
destroys
matrilocality. If this
polygyny factor is controlled (e.g., through a multiple
regression model), division of labor turns out to
be a significant predictor of postmarital residence. Thus,
Murdock's hypotheses regarding the relationships between the sexual
division of labor and postmarital residence were basically correct,
though, as has been shown by Korotayev, the actual relationships
between those two groups of variables are more complicated than he
expected.
In modern societies we observe a trend toward the
neolocal residence.
Contemporary views on marriage
Criticisms
Many people have proposed arguments against marriage for various
reasons. These include political and religious criticisms,
pragmatic reference to the
divorce
rate, as well as
celibacy for religious
or philosophical reasons.
Controversial views
Some views about marriage are controversial. Advocates of same-sex
rights criticize the exclusion of homosexual relationships from
legal and social recognition and the rights and obligations it
provides. At the same time,
social
conservatives in some countries oppose any attempt to define
marriage to include anything other than the union of one man and
one woman, claiming that to do so would "deprive the term of its
fundamental and defining meaning.". In other countries,
polygamy is a "socially conservative"
practice.
Currently 37 U.S. states have passed laws which define marriage as
limited to a union between one man and one woman: 33 state
legislatures have passed statutes to that effect, and 4 states
(Alaska, Hawaii, Nebraska and Nevada) have, by popular vote, passed
Defense of Marriage Acts (DOMAs) as constitutional amendments; the
Ohio state legislature is currently debating a Defense of Marriage
Act. Thirteen states, therefore, do not currently have laws on
their books which limit marriage to a union between one man and one
woman.
The state of Massachusetts has sued the U.S. federal government
over its definition of marriage. The lawsuit, brought by the first
state to legalize gay marriage, said the 1996 Defense of Marriage
Act (DOMA) infringed on a state's sovereign right to define marital
status. The lawsuit alleges that DOMA infringed on a state's
sovereign right to define marital status and is
unconstitutional.
See also
- Related concepts
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External links