Description
Book SynopsisIn an age when even the humblest marriage was influenced by material calculation, O'Hara maintains that courtship still played a vital role in securing marriages. Here, the structured nature of Tudor courtship is examined using both historical and anthropological perspectives.
Trade Review'... one of the most illuminating studies of marriage in the period that I have read in the last thirty years.' Professor K. E. Wrightson 'Overall, then, this is a quite wonderful book, richly rewarding in its detail, insights and conclusions. It will change the way historians think about the origins of the European marriage pattern, about the popular acculturation of marriage law, about the dynamics of inheritance and most of all about the freedom which is conventionally understood to have underpinned the making of English marriage.' Journal of Continuity and Change
Table of Contents1. The structures of courtship and the role of family, kin and community.
2. The language of tokens and the making of marriage
3. 'Movers', 'sutors', 'speakers', and 'brokers' of marriage: the role of the go-betweens as a 'means' of courtship
4. Courtship horizons in the sixteenth century: distance and place as factors in marriage formation
5. The timing of marriage: constraints and expectations
6. Material girls?: dowries and property in courtship