In-Laws and Outlaws

In-Laws and Outlaws

Author: Sybil Wolfram

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2023-07-05

Total Pages: 239

ISBN-13: 1000894312

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Originally published in 1987, this book presented for the first time a unified treatment of English kinship of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This system, far from being a patchwork of historical accidents, has a remarkably logical overall structure, permeating both law and custom. To understand it one must study a wide variety of sources ranging from Parliamentary debates through accounts of contemporary events, cases and incidents to fiction of the day. The work is pertinent to current studies in a number of fields: in history it represents a systematic overview, highlighting new sources of material, while for lawyers it gives a historical context and explanation of ‘family law’, particularly topical for impending English legislation in this area at the time. It collects two centuries of sociological data, and presents social anthropologists with the English system for comparison with systems conventionally studied in the field and with kinship theory. Finally, it provides philosophers with a new arena in which to discuss the nature of explanations of human activities, besides raising fresh questions.


Marriage With a Deceased Wife's Sister: An Address Delivered at a Meeting of Scottish Churchmen

Marriage With a Deceased Wife's Sister: An Address Delivered at a Meeting of Scottish Churchmen

Author: Horace Courtenay Gammell Forbes

Publisher: Good Press

Published: 2020-12-08

Total Pages: 32

ISBN-13:

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This address was given in 1883 at a time when there was a movement to allow the sanctifying in the church of the marriage between a widowed man and his dead wife's sister. At the time it was illegal, and any such marriage was voided. Lord Forbes, who gave the address was a Scottish peer who represented Scotland in the House of Lords. He was vehemently opposed to any change to the ruling. Later that year a Bill was presented to Parliament which eventually, in 1902, reversed this rule.