Love, Sex, and Marriage Through the Ages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 96
Page 110
First, it displaced the idea of the mystical bond, henosis, in carnal relations
whereby man and wife became one. The Church now had a definition of
marriage that permitted full sway to the antisexual leanings of the hierarchy. In
addition, the ...
First, it displaced the idea of the mystical bond, henosis, in carnal relations
whereby man and wife became one. The Church now had a definition of
marriage that permitted full sway to the antisexual leanings of the hierarchy. In
addition, the ...
Page 138
The weotuma itself underwent a metamorphosis- it was reduced to a token-while
the morgengifu, or morning-gift, became the heart of the financial concern. It now
became a mandatory gift, agreed upon in advance upon fulfillment of the ...
The weotuma itself underwent a metamorphosis- it was reduced to a token-while
the morgengifu, or morning-gift, became the heart of the financial concern. It now
became a mandatory gift, agreed upon in advance upon fulfillment of the ...
Page 230
After his relationship with Madame de Maintenon became established, he
became rather dour and a poor model of an adulterous king. Louis XV, on the
other hand, maintained liaisons with the opposite sex to the end. Under his reign,
the ...
After his relationship with Madame de Maintenon became established, he
became rather dour and a poor model of an adulterous king. Louis XV, on the
other hand, maintained liaisons with the opposite sex to the end. Under his reign,
the ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
wL Introduction | 1 |
The Evolution and Classification of Marriage | 9 |
Hebrew Marriage in the Old Testament | 34 |
Copyright | |
23 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accepted adultery American attitudes became become behavior bride bride-price Cathar century ceremony child Christian Church civil concubine considered couple courtly love courtship custom daughter desire Despite divorce dowry E. S. Turner economic Ellis emotional England equal exogamy extramarital fact factors father favor female freedom Freud girl groom group marriage hand happy homosexual husband and wife Ibid incest incest taboo individual inferior interaction intercourse interpersonal interpersonal relationships involved Japanese Kinsey lady less living Lord lover Luther male marital choice married matriarchy matrimony monogamy moral Mormons mother nature never Noyes one's orgasm parents partner passion patriarchal percent person physical polygyny position premarital prostitutes reason regarding relationship religious role Roman sensual sexual sexual intercourse Sigmund Freud social society Soviet spiritual spouse status swingers taboo traditional troubadour unmarried Victorian virginity wedding widow wives woman women young