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From
The Seventeenth Century Lady:
Once at the altar, marriage for a man meant primarily the chance to
father a lineage, to become master of a household, and to take control
of his wife’s finances, wealth and belongings. It also made him eligible
for various offices, such as to be a reeve (official supervising a
landowner’s estate) or a member of a jury, or warden or constable of a
Parish. Husbandry was originally control of livestock for profit, and
the idea of this control for profit still permeated 17th century marriage.
Marriage for a woman, on the other hand, meant imminent motherhood,
giving up her rights and lands, and a means of determining her social
standing. She was ‘graded’ as a woman according to the status of her
husband, so a ‘good match’, in other words a profitable match, was
essential. A married woman also was granted access to other women’s
births and deaths, as these were usually attended by married women, and
so to the network of wives and the hidden knowledge of menstruation and
midwifery.
Women were regarded as the ‘weaker vessel’ (a phrase taken from the
New Testament) and so physically, intellectually and morally inferior to
men; therefore, the man had a right to chastise his wife, by physical
punishment and beatings if she disobeyed him. (Read more.)
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