A History of Matrimonial Institutions (Vol. 1-3). George Elliott Howard
1883); Huc, Chinese Empire (London, 1855); Gray, China (London, 1878); Fielde, "Chinese Marriage Customs," in Pop. Sci. Monthly, XXXIV (New York, Dec. 1888); Kohler, "Aus dem chinesischen Civilrecht," ZVR., VI; Giles, Chinese Sketches (London, 1876); Grosier, De la Chine, Tome V (1819); and Smith's valuable Village Life in China (New York, Chicago, and Toronto, 1899), especially Part II. For the usages of allied races see Rockhill, "Notes on the Ethnology of Tibet," in Report of Smith. Inst., 1893, Nat. Museum (Washington, 1895); Kohler, "Studien aus dem japanischen Recht," in ZVR., X; Koehne, "Das Recht der Kalmücken," ibid., IX; Dalmas, Les Japonais (Paris, 1885); Daigoro, "Family Relations in Japan," in Transactions of the Japan Society, II; Rein, Japan nach Reisen und Studien (Leipzig, 1881); Hitchcock, "The Ainos of Yezo, Japan," in Report of Smith. Inst., 1890, Nat. Museum (Washington, 1891); Araki, Japanisches Eheschliessungsrecht (Göttingen, 1893); Loti, "Woman in Japan," in Harper's Monthly (New York, 1890), LXXXII, 119-31; and Titsingh, Cérémonies usitées au Japon (Paris, 1822), the first volume containing very curious and valuable matter concerning wedding customs.
By far the most thorough and comprehensive researches regarding the culture and social life of the American aborigines have been made by American scholars in the Contributions to American Ethnology, the Reports of the Bureau of Ethnology, the Reports of the Smithsonian Institution, including those of the National Museum, and in various periodicals, notably the American Antiquarian and the American Anthropologist. The most important of these papers for Indian marriage and family customs are Dorsey, "Omaha Sociology," in III. Rep. of Bureau of Eth., 205-370 (Washington, 1884), supplemented by his "Siouan Sociology," ibid., XV, 205-44 (Washington, 1897); McGee, "Siouan Indians," ibid., XV, 153-204; idem, "The Seri Indians," ibid., XVII, Part I (Washington, 1898); Mooney, "Siouan Tribes of the East," in XVII. Rep. of Bureau of Eth. (Washington, 1894); Riggs, "Dakota Grammar, Texts, and Ethnography," in Contributions to N.A. Ethnology, IX (Washington, 1893); and the elaborate work of Powers, "Tribes of California" (Washington, 1877), constituting the third volume of the same series. Some important illustrations of the matrimonial usages of the Eskimo may be found in Murdoch, "Eth. Results of Point Barrow Expedition," in IX. Rep. of Bureau of Eth. (Washington, 1892); Nelson, "The Eskimo about Bering Strait," ibid., XVIII, Part I (Washington, 1899); and Turner, "Ethnology of the Ungava District," ibid., XI (Washington, 1894). See also MacCauley, "The Seminole Indians," ibid., V (Washington, 1887); Stevenson, "The Sia," ibid., XI, 3-157 (Washington, 1894); Hoffman, "Menomini Indians," ibid., XIV (Washington, 1896); Grossmann, "The Pima Indians of Arizona," in Report Smith. Inst., 1871 (Washington, 1873); Beckwith, "Notes on Customs of the Dakotahs," ibid., 1886, Part I (Washington, 1889); Willoughby, "Indians of the Quinaielt Agency," ibid., Part I; Eells, "Twana, Chemakum, and Klallam Indians," ibid., 1887 (Washington, 1889); Niblack, "Coast Indians of Southern Alaska and Northern Brit. Col.," ibid., 1888, Nat. Museum (Washington, 1890); Boaz, "Social Organization and Secret Societies of the Kwakiutl Indians," ibid., 1895, Nat. Museum (Washington, 1897); Stephen, "The Navajo," in Am. Anthropologist, VI (Washington, 1893); Grinnell, "Marriage among the Pawnees," ibid., IV (Washington, 1891); Corbusier, "Apache-Yumas and Apache-Mojaves," in Am. Antiquarian, VIII (Chicago, 1886); Beauchamp, "Aboriginal Communal Life," ibid., IX (Chicago, 1887), attacking Morgan's views; Peet, "Village Life and Clan Residences among the Emblematic Mounds," ibid., IX; his "Ethnographic Religions and Ancestor Worship," and his "Personal Divinities and Culture Heroes," both ibid., XV (Chicago, 1893); Powell, "Wyandotte Society," in Proc. Am. Assoc. Adv. Sci., XXIX (Salem, 1880); Beauchamp, "Permanence of Early Iroquois Clans and Sachemships," ibid., XXXIV (Salem, 1886); Mallery, "Israelite and Indian," ibid., XXXVIII (Salem, 1890); Fletcher's papers on totemism and animism in "Emblematic Use of the Tree in the Dakotan Group," and her "Study from the Omaha Tribe," both ibid., XLV, XLVI (Salem, 1897-98); Halbert, "Courtship and Marriage among the Choctaws of Mississippi," in Amer. Naturalist, March, 1832; Carr, "The Social and Political Position of Women among the Huron-Iroquois Tribes," XVI. Rep. of Peabody Museum (Cambridge, 1883).
Very valuable early notices of the social customs of the Brazilian Indians may be found in Stade, Captivity among the wild Tribes of eastern Brasil, 1547-55 (London, 1874); Anchieta, "Informação dos Casamentos dos Indios do Brasil," in Revista Trimensal, VIII (Rio de Janeiro, 1867); Souza, "Tratado descriptivo do Brazil em 1587," Revista do Instituto Hist. e Geog., XIV (Rio de Janeiro, 1851); Léry, Du mariage, polygamie, et degrez de consanguinité (3d ed., Geneva, 1585); D'Evreux, Voyage dans le nord du Brésil, 1613-14 (Leipzig and Paris, 1864); Moure, "Les Indiens de la province de Matto-Grosso (Brésil)," in Nouvelles annales des voyages, 1862, II (Paris); Guimarães, "Costumes e Linguagem dos Appiaacás ... de Matto-Grosso," in Revista Trimensal, VI (2d ed., Rio de Janeiro, 1865); and Magalhães, "Familia e Religião Selvagem," Revista Trimensal do Instituto, etc., XXXVI (Rio de Janeiro, 1873, 1876). With these may be read the important accounts of Lafitau, Mœurs des sauvages (Paris, 1724); Pratz, "Des mœurs et coutumes des peuples de la Louisiane (Natchez)," in his Hist. de la Louisiane, II (Paris, 1758); and Dobrizhoffer's description of "weddings" and "marriages" in his Account of the Abipones, an Equestrian People of Paraguay (London, 1822; Latin ed., 1784), among whom he lived as missionary for eight years after his arrival in 1749. There is also a very interesting passage in Humbolt, Vues de Cordillères (Paris, 1810). See further Von den Steinen's Unter den Naturvölkern Brasiliens, 1887-8 (Berlin, 1894); Martius, Von dem Rechtszustande unter den Ureinwohnern Brasiliens (Munich, 1832); which is reprinted with other matter in his Beiträge zur Ethnographie und Sprachenkunde Amerikas zumal Brasiliens (Leipzig, 1867); and Adam, Du parler des hommes et du parler des femmes dans la langue Caraïbe (Paris, 1879). Much material is also contained in Rink, Eskimo Tribes (Copenhagen and London, 1887); his Tales and Traditions of the Eskimo (Edinburgh and London, 1875); Catlin, North American Indians (London, 1841); Schoolcraft, Indian Tribes (Philadelphia, 1853-56); Bancroft, Native Races (New York, 1875-76); Kohler, "Das Recht der Azteken," in ZVR., XI; Vols. III and IV of Waitz, Anthropologie; Krause, Die Tlinkit-Indianer (Jena, 1885); and Bandelier "Social Organization and Mode of Government of the Ancient Mexicans," in Rep. Peabody Museum, II, 557-699.
Among the many works cited in this chapter which have already been enumerated in preceding Bibliographical Notes especially important are those of Jolly, Leist, Krause, Rossbach, Morgan, Bernhöft, Friedrichs, Spencer, Lubbock, Ploss, Lippert, Robertson Smith, Finck, Grosse, Hellwald, and various writings of Kohler.]
Everywhere among our ancestors, when authentic history dawns upon the institutions of the Germanic race, marriage is effected by means of a contract. The transaction is a contract of sale through which for a price the bride is conveyed by the father or guardian into the bridegroom's hand. But, as will appear later, the element of sale is rapidly taking on a symbolical character. The question arises in the outset as to the antiquity of contract in marriage. Is it of comparatively late origin, as is often assumed? Or can the element of agreement, of consent of the parties, be traced from the very beginning of the human family? Again, what is the character and what the historical significance of marriage by purchase? Is it the earliest form of matrimonial contract, and does it constitute a universal phase of development subsequent to that of capturing women?
I. WIFE-CAPTURE AND THE SYMBOL OF RAPE[472]
According to McLennan, as we have already seen, capture as a means of getting wives is a universal practice among primitive men. It is due to polyandry occasioned by a scarcity of women; it leads to exogamy; and it is generally superseded by contract in the form of wife-purchase.[473] The evidence of the former universality of the custom is derived from two sources: first, the existence of actual wife-capture among many peoples in all parts of the world; second, the symbol of rape in the marriage ceremony or in the preliminary act of taking the woman. The symbol, it is held, can be accounted for only as a survival of real capture. Other writers agree with McLennan in regarding the evidence as conclusive. Such, in effect, is the view of Dargun, though he admits that it cannot with absolute certainty be assumed that capture was ever the only form of marriage recognized.[474] Post, on the other