Also, the erosion of family ties is something that is widely discussed under the entirety of the scholarship on feudalism (however applicable/inapplicable that word and model may be now). I mean...Marc Bloch. Scholarship has moved past him but...foundational.
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Medieval marriage is widely discussed. WIDELY discussed. Georges Duby is a classic, albeit outdated perhaps now.
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Any of you scientists who claim to want to know more about it? Go to google scholar and input "medieval consanguinity" or "medieval marriage" or "medieval families" or something of the like.
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I went through the sources on this: I saw
@rmkarras cited for a brief comment about early medieval Europe before the Church started to mandate marriage as a sacrament.2 replies 2 retweets 25 likesShow this thread -
Okay so I take some SERIOUS issues with this right here:pic.twitter.com/SzVni2meSK
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Yes, the Church advocated consent. Didn't always happen, and arranged marriages occurred a lot. However, adoption: not banned, fosterage was common in early medieval Ireland. Households were not nuclear, and may have contained many relatives and different families
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Concubinage also continued, for a long time. Not necessarily "legally" but shall I point to the Merovingians? Also, remarriage happened SO OFTEN. The idea of "weak" kinship ties is...very inaccurate.
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Kinship was an ever changing thing. For nobles it defined your right to inherit titles, and primogeniture was not the norm for a long time. Also, people invented kinships and genealogies.
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But the fact that their data cannot account for peasantry of which we have very spotty demographic marriage data, then this whole study is ridiculous.
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Replying to @AdmiralHip
One reason for spotty marriage data is common law arrangements
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Yeah I know, I make that point. Many people didn't care, the idea of what a marriage was varied a lot, and it wasn't exactly overly enforced, or at the very least, we cannot know the ratio of Church marriages to common law ones.
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