Study: Medieval Gay Marriages

by ScienceDave | August 23, 2007 at 08:29 am
3959 views | 15 Recommendations | 4 comments

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Civil Unions, aka 'Gay Marriages', could be centuries old according to a recent publication in the Journal of Modern History.  Historical reviews by Allan Tulchin of Shippensburg University have revelead that so-called 'affrèrement' in 15th century France not only included brothers sharing an estate, but also unrelated male couples.

His study provides convincing evidence that civil unions of two unrelated males have existed for some time, unlike what many religious individuals are currently preaching in the United States as an abomination towards the historical context of christian marriage.


Opponents of gay marriage in the United States today have tended to assume that nuclear families have always been the standard household form. However, as Tulchin writes, “Western family structures have been much more varied than many people today seem to realize, and Western legal systems have in the past made provisions for a variety of household structures.”

For example, in late medieval France, the term affrèrement – roughly translated as brotherment – was used to refer to a certain type of legal contract, which also existed elsewhere in Mediterranean Europe. These documents provided the foundation for non-nuclear households of many types and shared many characteristics with marriage contracts, as legal writers at the time were well aware, according to Tulchin.

The new “brothers” pledged to live together sharing ‘un pain, un vin, et une bourse’ – one bread, one wine, and one purse. As Tulchin notes, “The model for these household arrangements is that of two or more brothers who have inherited the family home on an equal basis from their parents and who will continue to live together, just as they did when they were children.” But at the same time, “the affrèrement was not only for brothers,” since many other people, including relatives and non-relatives, used it.

The effects of entering into an affrèrement were profound. As Tulchin explains: “All of their goods usually became the joint property of both parties, and each commonly became the other’s legal heir. They also frequently testified that they entered into the contract because of their affection for one another. As with all contracts, affrèrements had to be sworn before a notary and required witnesses, commonly the friends of the affrèrés.”

Tulchin argues that in cases where the affrèrés were single unrelated men, these contracts provide “considerable evidence that the affrèrés were using affrèrements to formalize same-sex loving relationships. . . . I suspect that some of these relationships were sexual, while others may not have been. It is impossible to prove either way and probably also somewhat irrelevant to understanding their way of thinking. They loved each other, and the community accepted that. What followed did not produce any documents.”

He concludes: “The very existence of affrèrements shows that there was a radical shift in attitudes between the sixteenth century and the rise of modern antihomosexual legislation in the twentieth.”

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Victoria Revay
Victoria Revay
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 12:20 on August 23rd, 2007

nouseforadave, this is really interesting.  Thanks for this.

isabella mori
isabella mori
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 13:19 on August 23rd, 2007


denseatoms
denseatoms
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 20:33 on August 23rd, 2007

Would be a kick in the head if these arrangements were the distant foundations of college fraternities ("brotherments" of another kind). Thanks for this info.


Incidentally, the oldest text in the French language is a brother oath (between two royal siblings and against their own brother). The Columbia Encyclopedia said:

"842 A.D., oath sworn by Charles the Bald (later Holy Roman Emperor Charles II) and Louis the German in solemnizing their alliance against their brother, Emperor Lothair I. The chief political result of this alliance was the Treaty of Verdun (843 A.D.). Each brother made his oath in the language of the other’s followers, so that it might be understood. The version used by Louis is often considered the oldest known specimen of French."

1
Jacques

Music to my ears. I am battling Proposition 8 proponents in California and this is just one more factual nail in the "Marriage = one man one woman baloney. Now I can sing this on my 14th century Lute and keep in period! Repeal Proposition H8!

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Victoria Revay
First Flagged at 12:20 PM, Aug 23, 2007 by Victoria Revay
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