A History of Matrimonial Institutions (Vol. 1-3). George Elliott Howard

A History of Matrimonial Institutions (Vol. 1-3) - George Elliott Howard


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marriages prevailed generally throughout Christendom.[1094] The provincial church councils as well as the temporal powers, local and national, were kept busy in devising penalties or other restraints in the vain hope of putting a stop to it. Such was the case in Holland, where, in spite of the decrees of the church and the statutes of the state, secret marriages, without the presence of witness, magistrate, or priest, were common.[1095] The same is true of Portugal;[1096] and Pope Alexander III. confesses that they were frequent in Italy, at least in the bishopric of Salerno, and they gave rise to vexatious litigation.[1097] Suits were sometimes brought to enforce an alleged secret marriage for impure purposes. So severe were the provisions of Swiss legislation to check this evil, toward the close of the Middle Ages, that even the innocent were deterred from appealing to the courts to enforce their matrimonial rights. Before bringing suit security was required; and the unsuccessful plaintiff was fined and compelled to pay damage.[1098] "Against a Zürich law of this kind an official of Konstanz remonstrates, declaring that 'without doubt there are in the bishoprick of Konstanz hundreds of persons who before the Lord God are married people, legally joined together, and yet who are so much in dread of the penalty as not to dare to enforce their legal rights against one another.'"[1099] At the Council of Trent report was made of secret marriages in Africa[1100] and the West Indies;[1101] while in Germany they gave trouble both to the temporal and spiritual law-maker long after the Reformation.[1102] The uncertainty and complexity of matrimonial law bore their natural fruit in Spain[1103] and in France.[1104] It was the king of France who through his oratores, or representatives, brought before the Council of Trent the proposal which prevailed to reform the abuse by making the validity of marriage depend upon its public solemnization;[1105] while a measure of Alfonso the Wise of Castile, in 1258, not only defines the well-known three kinds of clandestine marriages, but shows clearly, what Gratian[1106] had already pointed out, that the permanence or dissolution of such a marriage really depends upon the will of the parties themselves, or even one of them. "Three kinds of marriage are called 'secret;' the first is one concluded privately and without witnesses, so that it cannot be proved. The second is one formed before witnesses, but without the consent of the bride's father, or mother, or other relative in whose protection she is, and without payment of the arrha or observing the other forms (honors) which holy church demands. The third is one whose banns have not been published in the parish where the parties live.... The reason why the holy church forbids secret marriages is this: When a difference arises between the wedded pair, and the one will no longer live with the other, the church has no means to prevent the separation, even when in truth a marriage exists; because it cannot be proved. For the church cannot pass judgment on secrets; but only on the allegations of the parties which are proved."[1107]

      Nowhere perhaps is the history of secret marriages so interesting as in Scotland[1108] and mediæval England. Many proofs and illustrations from literature, early rituals, law-books, and judicial decisions have been collected by Friedberg.[1109] Usually the nuptials were celebrated in presence of a priest at the church door according to popular forms, or, in the later period, according to more elaborate religious rites. But by custom the simple hand-fasting, with or without giving to the bride a penny or piece of gold, sufficed; and the hand-fasting is found also in connection with the ecclesiastical ceremony. Even in the case of secret marriages "it is characteristic that mention is almost always made of the presence of a priest who confers his blessing."[1110] Miles Coverdale's translation of Bullinger's Christen State of Matrimonye (ca. 1541) contains the following instructive passage:

      "Yet in thys thynge also must I warne everye reasonable & honest parson to beware, that in contractyng of maryage they dyssemble not, nor set forthe any lye. Every man lykewyse must esteme the parson to whom he is hand-fasted, none otherwyse than for his owne spouse, though as yet it be not done in the church nor in the streate. After the hand fasting & makyng of the contracte, the church goyng & weddyng shulde not be deffered to long, lest the wicked sowe hys vngracious sede in the mene season. Likewise the wedding (& cohabitaciō of the parties) ought to be bego[=n]e with god, & with the ernest prayer of the whole church or congregaciō.... In to this dishe hath the devill put his foote, & myngled it with many wicked vses & customes. For in some places ther is such a maner, wel worthy to be rebuked that at the hand fastynge there is made a great feast & superfluous bancket, & even the same night are the two hād fasted persones brought & layed together, yea certayne wekes afore they go tot [sic] the church."[1111]

      Eleven years earlier similar testimony is given in Richard Whitforde's Werke for housholders. "The ghostly ennemy," he says, "doth deceyue many psones by ye pretence & colour of matrymony in pryuate & secrete contractes. For many men whan they can not obteyn theyr vnclene desyre of the woman wyl promyse marryage, & thervpon make a contracte promyse, & gyue fayth & trouth eche vnto other sayenge. Here I take the Margery vnto my wyfe, I therto plyght the my trouth. And she agayne, vnto hym in lyke maner. And after that done, they suppose they maye lawfully vse theyr vnclene behauyour, and somtyme the acte and dede doth folow, vnto the great offence of god & theyr owne soules. It is a great ieopardy therfore to make ony suche contractes, specyally amonge them selfe secretely alone, without recordes, whiche must be two at the least."[1112]

      In Scudmore's A Woman's a Weathercocke the priest who is expected to solemnize the marriage of a lady with Count Frederick says:

      "She is contracted, sir, nay married,

       Unto another man, though it want forme:

       And such strange passages and mutuall vowes,

       I would make your short haire start, through youre blacke

       Cap, should you heare it."[1113]

      Many similar proofs may be found in the plays and ballads of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

      III. THE EVILS OF THE SPIRITUAL JURISDICTION

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      The separation of the temporal and spiritual courts and the tenacity with which early custom and theory were preserved in the common law[1114] render the history of matrimonial judicature anomalous in England. The leading case occurs in the reign of Stephen. "Richard de Anesty's memorable law-suit[1115] was the outcome of a divorce pronounced in 1143 under the authority of a papal rescript, and one that to all appearance illustrated what was to be a characteristic doctrine of the canon law: a marriage solemnly celebrated in church, a marriage of which a child had been born, was set aside as null in favour of an earlier marriage constituted by a mere exchange of consenting words."[1116] By the time of Henry II. this doctrine was completely established in England, as shown by the famous decretal epistle of Alexander III. to the bishop of Norwich: "A strong case is put. On the one hand stands the bare consent per verba de praesenti, unhallowed and unconsummated, on the other a solemn and a consummated union. The latter must yield to the former."[1117] Such remained the law of England until the passage of the Hardwicke act in 1753.[1118]

      The perils arising in the canonical theory of espousals were greatly increased by the doctrine of impediments to marriage, particularly those growing out of forbidden degrees of affinity, consanguinity, and spiritual relationship.[1119] "Reckless of mundane consequences, the church while she treated marriage as a formless contract, multiplied impediments which made the formation of a valid marriage a matter of chance."[1120] The stringency of the law in this regard appears to be entirely inconsistent with the theory that marriage should be encouraged. But doubtless the apparent contradiction is due largely to the same ideas which shaped that theory. The Fathers dreaded the sins of the flesh through which the sacramental nature of marriage might be defiled;[1121] and they may have felt a reaction against the freedom of the German custom touching the marriage of blood kindred.[1122]

      The development of the law of forbidden degrees, through the doctrines of the early Christian teachers and a long series of conciliar decrees, cannot here be described. In the thirteenth century the various rules were codified by the schoolmen under fifteen heads; "and their code has been accepted and acted upon by the greater part of western Christendom down to the present day."[1123] For a time prohibition was


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