Studies on Medieval and Early Modern Women: Pawns Or Players?Christine Meek, Catherine Lawless The passive and active of 'pawns or players' is in many ways the kernel of the ongoing debate within the analysis of the role of women in the past. The essays, by both established and younger scholars and covering a wide time-span and geographical area, range from examinations of the laws which restrained or enabled women to discussions of women who resisted the authorities, from studies of women who stepped outside their prescribed role and behaved in a manner that might be described as 'manly' to analyses of the constructions of gender and womanhood that influenced such prescriptions. |
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Page 59
Pawns Or Players? Christine Meek, Catherine Lawless. The power of of dower : the importance of dower in the lives of medieval women in Ireland Gillian Kenny THE IMPORTATION OF THE DOWER LAW The Anglo - Norman invasion of Ireland in the ...
Pawns Or Players? Christine Meek, Catherine Lawless. The power of of dower : the importance of dower in the lives of medieval women in Ireland Gillian Kenny THE IMPORTATION OF THE DOWER LAW The Anglo - Norman invasion of Ireland in the ...
Page 60
... dower , which consisted of lands which the father or other ancestor of the groom was seised of but which the ancestor agreed should be named by the heir as dower . This was the dower ' ex assensu patris ' . The second exception alluded ...
... dower , which consisted of lands which the father or other ancestor of the groom was seised of but which the ancestor agreed should be named by the heir as dower . This was the dower ' ex assensu patris ' . The second exception alluded ...
Page 62
... dower rights were crystallising ( Magna Carta included a clause expressly protecting the right of dower ) , but there were some limitations on what could be claimed as dower . One item , which a widow could not take as dower , was an ...
... dower rights were crystallising ( Magna Carta included a clause expressly protecting the right of dower ) , but there were some limitations on what could be claimed as dower . One item , which a widow could not take as dower , was an ...
Contents
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 6 | 6 |
Share and share alike? The marriage portion inheritance | 36 |
women and the conquest | 49 |
Copyright | |
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Studies on Medieval and Early Modern Women: Pawns Or Players? Catherine Lawless No preview available - 2003 |
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abbey accusations Adam Adela Adela of Blois Angélique de Saint-Jean Anglo-Norman Arnauld Avitus bishop Calendar Carol Baxter cartulary Caterina Catholic charters Christian Church contemporary convent countess daughter death depicted dower dower lands Dracontius dragon Dublin early modern ecclesiastical Elicia English evidence example father female feminine Florentine gender Genesis Gerald Gerald of Wales Giovanni granted heir Henry Hilary of Arles husband Ibid Illegitimacy Ireland Irish John king Kuehn Latin letters London lord lordly Lorenzo Lucrezia male Margery Margery Kempe maritagia maritagium Marmoutier marriage marriage portion married medieval mistress monastic monster mother nuns Orderic Vitalis Oxford papal Paris Patrologia Latina pilgrimage Port-Royal des Champs records Reformation Registri Battesimali relationships religieuses de Port-Royal religious Renaissance Renaissance Florence resistance role Sainte seisin sexual sign the Formulary signature sisterhood sisters slave social Society Sœurs St George thirteenth century violence virago vols widow wife William woman women