1st Edition

Gender and Divorce in Europe: 1600 – 1900 A Praxeological Perspective

Edited By Andrea Griesebner, Evdoxios Doxiadis Copyright 2024
250 Pages
by Routledge

250 Pages
by Routledge

250 Pages
by Routledge

Getting divorced and remarried are now common practices in European societies, even if the rules differ from one country to the next. Civil marriage law still echoes religious marriage law, which for centuries determined which persons could enter into marriage with each other and how validly contracted marriages could be ended. Religions and denominations also had different regulations... Read more

Chapter One - Introduction
Andrea Griesebner and Evdoxios Doxiadis

Chapter Two - Women and Work
Maria Ågren

Part I - Divorce from Bed and Board

Chapter Three - Separated Beds – Interwoven Property: Separation and Divorce in the Habsburg Monarchy between the mid-16th and the mid-19th Centuries
Andrea Griesebner and Susanne Hehenberger

Chapter Four - Separating Persons and Property in Early Modern English Marriages
K.J. Kesselring and Tim Stretton

Chapter Five - Divorce in Early Modern Bilbao
Nere Jone Intxaustegi Jauregi

Chapter Six - Judicial Separation and Its Material Effects in France during the 16th and 17th Centuries
Claire Chatelain

Chapter Seven - Interwoven Ecclesiastical and Civil Divorce Trials: A Venetian Case Study (1785)
Marie Malherbe

Chapter Eight - Divorce during the Concordat at the Marriage Courts of Prague and Trent (1857–1868)
Zuzana Pavelková Čevelová and Jessica Reich

Chapter Nine - Material Matters: Dissolution of Economic Ties in the Context of Divorces in Rural Lower Austria in the 1920s and 1930s
Birgit Dober

Part II - Divorce with Dissolution of the Marriage

Chapter Ten - Enduring Animosity: Negotiating Post-separation Conflicts in the German County of Lippe (17th and 18th Centuries)
Iris Fleßenkämper

Chapter Eleven - The Indistinct Line between Marriage and Divorce: The Ambiguous Nature of the Marital Status in the 17th-Century Ottoman Empire
Gamze Yavuzer

Chapter Twelve - The Influence of Islamic Law on Greek Orthodox Divorce under Ottoman Rule
Evdoxios Doxiadis

Chapter Thirteen - The Economy of Islamic Divorce in Habsburg Bosnia and Herzegovina (1878–1918)
Ninja Bumann

Chapter Fourteen - New Possibilities – New Practices? Divorces of Jewish Couples under the Purview of the Austrian Civil Code in the 19th Century: Provisions, Agreements, and Property Issues
Ellinor Forster

Biography

Andrea Griesebner is a Professor in the Department of History at the University of Vienna. She served as vice chair from 2014 to 2017 and as chair of the department from 2017 to 2020. She obtained her PhD in 1998 and her Habilitation in 2001 in the field of Early Modern Gender and Criminal History at the University of Vienna. In recent years, her work and publications have focused on divorce and the consequences of divorce for Catholic couples. As principal investigator, she directed three third-party funded research projects on this topic. These were supported by the Austrian Science Fund and by the Anniversary Fund of the National Bank of Austria between 2011 and 2020.

Evdoxios Doxiadis is an Associate Professor in History at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, Canada. His research is on Greek, Balkan, and Mediterranean history with a focus on the 18th and 19th centuries and a particular interest in questions of gender, law, state formation, and minorities. He has published two monographs: The Shackles of Modernity: Women, Property, and the Transition from the Ottoman Empire to the Modern Greek State 1750–1850 (2011) and State, Nationalism and the Jewish Communities of Modern Greece (2018), and a co-edited volume with Aimee Placas entitled Living under Austerity: Greek Society in Crisis (2018).