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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The priest at the nuptials, declares Sohm, "appears first of all as a public person."[1153] In particular the church tried to gain publicity for marriage by the institution of banns. The custom of publishing banns seems first to have made its appearance in France, probably as early as the fifth century.[1154] It is enforced by the capitulary of 802, which gains its real significance from this fact, and not from the mention of the priestly benediction.[1155] From France it gradually made its way into other countries of Europe. Thus in the year 1200, as already noted, banns were enforced by Archbishop Walter; and they were first made a general requirement by Innocent III. at the fourth Lateran council in 1215.[1156] Later the English archbishops found it necessary from time to time to impose more stringent penalties for neglect of the proper publication of banns;[1157] and they were enforced, without making the publication essential to a valid marriage, by the Council of Trent. From the twelfth century onward the marriage rituals contain directions for the asking and publication of banns;[1158] while the punishment of persons guilty of violating the canons in this regard gave much employment to the spiritual courts during the Middle Ages.[1159]

      The institution of banns has a special historical interest as being in some sense the mediæval substitute for the modern registration and official license to wed. The practice was to announce the marriage, usually on three successive Sundays preceding the nuptials, that any objection on the ground of relationship or other disability might be brought forward. But the decrees of the church were not carefully enforced. Dispensation from the obligation to publish banns was the right of the bishop, but his license was usually granted only in favor of the nobility and higher classes; and the right constituted an important source of revenue.[1160]

      The year 1538 marks an important epoch in the administration of English matrimonial law. It was then, according to the researches of Burn, that parish registers of births, deaths, and marriages were first introduced; although before this time it had been customary in some places to inscribe such records in the missals and psalters of the church.[1161] The first article of the injunctions issued by Thomas Cromwell, vice-regent under Henry VIII., provided: "Item, That you and every parson, vicar, or curate within this Diocese, for every Church keep one Book or Register, wherein he shall write the day and year of every Wedding, Christening, and Burial, made within your parish for your time, and so every man succeeding you likewise, and also there insert every person's name, that shall be so wedded, christened, and buried. And for the safe keeping of the same Book the parish shall be bound to provide of their common charges one sure coffer, with two locks and keys, whereof the one to remain with you, and the other with the Wardens of every parish wherein the said Book shall be laid up, which Book ye shall every Sunday take forth, and in the presence of the said Wardens or one of them, write and record in the same, all the Weddings, Christenings, and Burials made the whole week afore, and that done, to lay up the Book in the said coffer as afore; and for every time that the same shall be omitted, the party that shall be in the fault thereof, shall forfeit to the said Church iijs. iiijd. to be employed on the reparation of the said Church."[1162]

      Thus in this, the most ancient English registration act, the parson or incumbent appears as the original registrar; and that the importance of keeping such record was keenly appreciated is shown by the anxious, almost painful, minuteness with which his duties are defined. The order of Henry VIII. was enforced or supplemented under Edward VI., Elizabeth, William III., and other monarchs; but, save during the Commonwealth, no material change was made in the mode of registration until in 1836 the present system was introduced.[1163]

      CHAPTER IX

       THE PROTESTANT CONCEPTION OF MARRIAGE

       Table of Contents

      [Bibliographical Note IX.—The ideas of the German Reformation, and therefore ultimately of Protestantism, relative to the form and the nature of marriage were molded by the thought of Martin Luther. Among his numerous writings on the subject most important are the "Vom heiligen Ehestandt und Oeconomia oder Haushaltung," being the thirty-sixth chapter of the Tischreden (folio, Frankfort, 1571); and the following articles in his Bücher und Schriften (folio, Jena, 1555-80): "Sermon vom ehelichen Stande" (1519, in Vol. I); "Predigten über das erste Buch Mose" (1527, in Vol. IV); and especially the "Von Ehesachen" (1530, in Vol. V). The principal passages from all of Luther's writings on the subject of matrimony and divorce, classified in seven groups, with critical and historical notes and marginal explanation of archaic words, are conveniently given in von Strampff's Dr. Martin Luther: Ueber die Ehe (Berlin, 1857). This is an important Quellenbuch for the student. A very useful book also, containing twelve of his most important papers, is the second volume of the Kleinere Schriften Dr. Martin Luthers, entitled "Von Ehe- und Klostersachen" (Bielefeld and Leipzig, 1877). Older works which afford some assistance are Niess's Ehestands-Buch (Eisleben and Leipzig, 1858), comprising, with other matter, some of the utterances of Luther; and Froböse's Dr. Martin Luther's ernste, kräftige Worte über Ehe und eheliche Verhältnisse (Hanover, 1825).

      The first philosophical treatise on marriage, anticipating in various ways the modern conception, is Erasmus's Christiani matrimonii institutio (Basel, 1526). The dedicatory epistle, dated July, 1526, is addressed to Queen Catherine of England. The edition cited in the text bears the general title De matrimonio christiano (Lugd. Bat., 1650); and to it is appended Vivus's Conjugii origine et utilitate discursus. Erasmus's treatise may also be found in Vol. V of his Opera omnia (Lugd. Bat., 1704). The work was prohibited mainly because of its critical tone regarding the excessive ardor of the primitive Christians for celibacy and perpetual virginity. Of first-rate importance for obtaining a general view of the doctrines of the German Reformation is Sarcerius, Vom heiligen Ehestande (1553); or the same work enlarged under title Corpus juris matrimonialis (Frankfort, 1569). It has been found convenient to relegate the description of many writings available as sources for this chapter to Bibliographical Note XI. See particularly the works of Brenz, Kling, Beust, Schneidewin, Melanchthon, Zwingli, Bullinger, Bucer, Monner, Bidembach, Mentzer, Brouwer, and Forster, there referred to. Besides Melanchthon's "De conjugio" (1551), in Opera, I (Erlangen, 1828), see also his "De arbore consanguinitatis et affinitatis" (1541), in Sarcerius, Vom heiligen Ehestande, lvs. xii-xxvii; or the "Corpus juris matrimonialis," lvs. xi-xxvii, where may also be found much additional matter from Luther, Kling, and others relating to forbidden degrees. In this connection may also be consulted Niemeier, De conjugiis prohibitis dissertationes (Helmstadt, 1705), comprising ten distinct essays, with a critical and bibliographical supplement, produced during the years 1699-1705.

      The most important collection of church regulations regarding marriage is Richter's Die evangelische Kirchordnungen des sechszehnten Jahrhunderts (Weimar, 1846). These have been partly analyzed by Meier, Jus, quod de forma matrimonii ineundi valet (Berlin, 1856); and thoroughly by Goeschen, Doctrina de matrimonio (Halle, 1848). The rejection of priestly celibacy by the Reformers has called forth numerous writings, among which the earliest are Luther, Bedenken und Unterricht von den Klöstern und allen geistlichen Gelübden (1522); idem, An die herrn deutschs Ordens (original edition in the author's possession, Wittenberg, 1523); Bugenhagen, De conjugio episcoporum et diaconorum (1525); the anonymous Underricht auss Göttlichen und Gaystlichen Rechten, Auch auss den flayschlichen Bepstlischen unrechten, ob ain Priester ain Eeweyb, oder Concubin ... haben möge (1526). See also the elaborate treatise of Calixtus, De conjugio clericorum (Frankfort, 1653); and the dissertation of Roldanus, De mente Pauli, volentis episcopum esse unius uxoris maritum (Lugd. Bat., 1710).

      On the famous "double marriage" of Landgrave Philip of Hesse a source of unique interest is the Argumenta Buceri pro et contra, a manuscript by Bucer written in 1539 and first published at Cassel in 1878. The original documents in the case are appended to the exceedingly lively work of Arcuarius, Kurtze, Doch unpartheyisch- und Gewissenhaffte Betrachtung des ... Heiligen Ehestandes (1679), decidedly inclining to the side of Luther and his colleagues. Beza, Tractatio de polygamia (Geneva, 1568), replies to the defense of polygamy by Ochino, Dialogue (Zurich, 1563; Eng. trans., London, 1657). The most celebrated book produced in this controversy is Theophilus Alethaeus's (Johann Lyser's) Discursus politicus de polygamia (2d ed., Freiburg, 1676); or the same with the prefixed general title, Polygamia triumphatrix (Londini Scanorum, 1682), this edition containing the


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