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Marriage, the Church, and its Judges in Renaissance Venice, 1420-1545

✍ Scribed by Cecilia Cristellon (auth.)


Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Year
2017
Tongue
English
Leaves
295
Series
Early Modern History: Society and Culture
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


This book investigates the actions of marriage tribunals by analyzing the richest source of marriage suits extant in Italy, those of the Venetian ecclesiastical tribunal, between 1420 and the opening of the Council of Trent. It offers a strongly representative overview of the changes the Council introduced to centuries-old marriage practices, relegating it to the realm of marginality and deviance and nearly erasing the memory of it altogether. From the eleventh century onward, the Church assured itself of a jurisdictional monopoly over the matter of marriage, operating both in concert and in conflict with secular authorities by virtue of marriage’s civil consequences, the first of which regarded the legitimacy of children. Secular tribunals were responsible for patrimonial matters between spouses, though the Church at times inserted itself into these matters either directly, by substituting itself for the secular authority, or indirectly, by influencing Rulings through their own sentences. Lay magistratures, for their part, somewhat eroded the authority of ecclesiastical tribunals by continuing to exercise autonomous jurisdiction over marriage, especially regarding separation and crimes strictly connected to the nuptial bond and its definition, including adultery, bigamy, and rape.


✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-xvii
Introduction....Pages 1-31
The Matrimonial Tribunal and the Procedure in Marriage Litigations....Pages 33-75
Witnesses and Testimony....Pages 77-110
The Office of the Judge: Mediation, Inquisition, Confession....Pages 111-157
β€œMaybe so”: Marriage and Consent in Pre-Tridentine Venice....Pages 159-217
Venetian β€œMatrimonialia”: A Quantitative Analysis (1420–1500)....Pages 219-226
Conclusions....Pages 227-236
Back Matter....Pages 237-286

✦ Subjects


History of Medieval Europe;History of Italy;Religion and Society;Legal History;Social History


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