'Lots of them did that': desertion, bigamy, and marital fluidity in late-nineteenth-century America.Abstract: Beverly Schwartzberg, "'Lots of Them Did That': Desertion, Bigamy bigamy (bĭ`gəmē), crime of marrying during the continuance of a lawful marriage. Bigamy is not committed if a prior marriage has been terminated by a divorce or a decree of nullity of marriage. , and Marital Pertaining to the relationship of Husband and Wife; having to do with marriage. Marital agreements are contracts that are entered into by individuals who are about to be married, are already married, or are in the process of ending a marriage. Fluidity in Late-Nineteenth-Century America" Although marriage was invested with significant personal, ideological, economic, legal, and political importance in late-nineteenth-century America, its endings and beginnings could be more fluid than the law suggested. This study of "contesting widow" applications, where two wives applied for a single soldier's pension, in Civil War pension files demonstrates these fluid marriage patterns among working-class couples. Some couples separated, and other individuals abandoned or deserted spouses. Short-term temporary separations sometimes lasted lifetimes. Many times the husbands and wives from these informal divorces married others, becoming bigamists. Their bigamous big·a·mous adj. 1. Involving bigamy. 2. Guilty of bigamy. big a·mous·ly adv.Adj. 1. remarriages, however, showed fundamental respect for the institution of marriage. The article demonstrates and illustrates the common use of alias names, the importance of geographical mobility, the practice of informal divorce and separation, the uses of deception deception n. the act of misleading another through intentionally false statements or fraudulent actions. (See: fraud, deceit) , common understandings and uses of family law, the prevalence of bigamy and serial marriage among men and women, and the economic circumstances CIRCUMSTANCES, evidence. The particulars which accompany a fact. 2. The facts proved are either possible or impossible, ordinary and probable, or extraordinary and improbable, recent or ancient; they may have happened near us, or afar off; they are public or of abandoned wives. Pension records help reveal significant marital histories that are otherwise hidden from view. |
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a·mous·ly adv.
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