Abstract
ABSTRACTThe Old English quasi-legal text Be wifmannes beweddunge (‘On the betrothal of a woman’) is a key source for understanding how marriages were contracted in late Anglo-Saxon England. This paper will use the nine clauses of Be wifmannes beweddunge as a window into a broader discussion of the Anglo-Saxon betrothal and wedding process. It will consider in turn the issue of licit and illicit unions, the economic and legal terms of the betrothal agreement, and the development of Christian wedding rites. It will argue that Be wifmannes beweddunge is fundamentally concerned with the legal, financial, physical and social protection of women within marriage. Moreover, it will argue that this text offers evidence for a gradual Christianisation of betrothal and wedding customs in late Anglo-Saxon England.
Funder
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Arts and Humanities,History,Cultural Studies
Reference12 articles.
1. The Problem of the Ending of the Wife's "Lament"
2. The Ethical Agency of the Female Lyric Voice: The Wife’s Lament and Catullus 64;Kinch;SP,2006
3. Tamar, Widowhood, and the Old English Prose Translation of Genesis
4. A Loose Canon: the Quadripartitus, Rectitudines, and the Creation of English Law;Lemanski;Nott. Med. Stud.,2016
5. Cotton Nero A.i and the Origins of Wulfstan’s Polity;Reinhard;JEGP,2020