ISBN: 978-0-87417-699-5
Binding: [Hardcover]
Pages: 224
Publication date: 2007
$34.95
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Unfit for Marriage
Impotent Spouses on Trial in the Basque Region of Spain, 1650-1750
Description
Divorce in 17th-Century Spain
In early modern Europe the sacrament of matrimony represented a life-long commitment, and the Catholic Church accepted few grounds for the dissolution of an unhappy marriage. One of these was an unconsummated marriage owing to the sexual impotency of one of the partners. Even then, an annulment was granted only after a Church court had conducted a lengthy investigation of the case, soliciting testimony from numerous witnesses as well as from the aggrieved couple, and had subjected the allegedly impotent spouse (and sometimes both spouses) to an intimate physical examination.
Historian Edward J. Behrend-Martínez studied the transcripts of eighty-three impotency trials conducted by the ecclesiastical court of the Spanish diocese of Calahorra in La Rioja—an area incorporating both Basque and Castilian populations and including urban and rural parishes. From these records, he produced a detailed account of private life and public sexuality in these early years of the modern era.
The transcripts provide insights into the dynamics of daily marital life and the role that property, gender, and personal preference played in marriage. They also reveal information about medical knowledge at the time and about contemporary understanding of the physiology and psychology of sex. Unfit for Marriage is the first study in English to address the proceedings of a Spanish ecclesiastical court and is a vivid portrait of marriage and marital sex in early modern Europe. It is essential reading to anyone interested in social history, gender studies, canon law, legal history, sexuality, and the history of divorce in Western Europe.
Reviews
“The book is a very significant contribution to the literature—historical, theological, and anthropological. It helps to overcome the historical preoccupation with Inquisition trials by demonstrating the richness of ordinary Church court cases and fills an important gap in our knowledge. For an early modern European history, the book is surprisingly sexy, while at the same time maintaining a dignified and tasteful level of discourse. The author is scholarly, measured, and trustworthy.” —Stanley H. Brandes, professor and chair of Department of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley
Contents
Author's Note:
One of the most exciting moments while doing research for this book was when I came across a love letter submitted as evidence in a matrimonial trial. I unfolded the love letter and found that it still contained the petals of a flower exchanged between a wife and her lover three hundred and fifty years earlier. These trials and this type of history transported me back to the everyday lives of seventeenth century Spaniards. The documents themselves seemed magical; the black ink contained crystallized minerals, so occasionally the handwriting shimmered as the morning sunlight came through the archive’s windows. I hope some of these documents’ enchanting qualities comes through to the readers of Unfit for Marriage.