Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Women in Middle English Society - 1

As Alcuin Blamires (1997:34) states, in the Middle Ages the case for marriage can often be simultaneously understood as the case for women. Marriage was seen largely in terms of property and commerce in the Middle Ages. The wife was the property of her husband and children were considered to be the property of their parents (Starkey, 1981:235).                          

            
In the gentle and knightly classes, the choice of a marriage partner usually had little, if anything, to do with love. Marriages were often arranged by parents, and child-marriages occurred regularly. If a child resisted the rebellion was stopped, at least in the case of a daughter, often with physical violence (Trevelyan, 1960:132). Physical violence against wives was also generally accepted, as long as a husband beat his wife ‘only in reason’ (Coulton, 1968:190).

An Introduction to the Middle Ages

The Middle Ages

The Middle Ages, or medieval period, in Europe lasted from approximately the fifth to the fifteenth centuries. The dating cannot, of course, be exact and there were enormous changes (in language, dress, society and literature, for instance) within this vast period.