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Encyclopedia > Trousseau

A dowry (also known as trousseau) is a gift of money or valuables given by the bride's family to that of the groom to permit their marriage. In societies where payment of dowry is common, unmarried women are seen to attract stigma and tarnish the household's reputation, so it is in the bride's family's interest to marry off their daughter as soon as she is eligible. In some areas where this is practiced, the size of the necessary dowry is directly proportional to the groom's social standing, thus making it virtually impossible for lower class women to marry into upper class families. In some cases where a woman's family is too poor to afford any dowry whatsoever, she is either simply forbidden from ever marrying, or at most becomes a concubine to a richer man who can afford to support a large household. An illustration of a bride. ... See also: A groom is a type of officer-servant in the British royal household. ... Marriage is a relationship and bond between individuals that plays a key role in the definition of many families. ... The word stigma (plural stigmata) has more than one possible meaning: a mark such as that made with a branding iron in botany, stigma can mean a part of the female part of a flower; that part of a pistil which has no epidermis, and is fitted to receive the... Concubinage is either the state of a couple living together as lovers with no obligation created by vows, legal marriage, or religious ceremony, or the state of a woman supported by a male lover who is married to, and usually living with, someone else. ...


The tradition of giving dowries is today perhaps most well-known in the Asian countries of China; in India, the practice is still very common, especially in rural areas, despite being prohibited by law as of 1961. However, dowries have been part of civil law in almost all countries, Europe included. Dowries were important social components of Roman marriages. Medieval Germans had the tradition of dowry and of Morgengab, both working to give a start in life to the young couple, as well as to secure the bride's future. This German tradition was followed by most people in medieval and modern Europe (all Western Europe being an outcome of Migrations of Germanic peoples), and only in the few recent centuries, the dowry and the Morgengab have disappeared from law in Europe. 1961 was a common year starting on Sunday (link will take you to calendar). ...


A sort of opposite tradition to a dowry is a bride price, paid by bridegroom to family of his bride. Bride price or bride wealth is an amount of money or property paid to the parents of a woman for the right to marry her. ...


The direct converse analogy of dowry is the Morgengab, paid by the bridegroom (or his family) to the bride. Its purpose was to secure the girl for such happenstances as widowhood or loss of other means to survive or loss of other property. Strictly speaking the Morgengab is not a dowry.


Mahr means a kind of dowry in Arabic, and is an important part of an Islamic marriage. It is more similar to a bride price than a traditional dowry, in that the husband gives the gift to the bride. However, unlike a bride price, the gift is given directly to the bride and not to her father. Although the gift can be, and often is money it can be anything so long as it is agreed upon by bride and groom. Mahr is quite similar to the Germanic Morgengab, and the Persian equivalent is called Mahrieh. Arabic (العربية) is a Semitic language, closely related to Hebrew and Aramaic. ... A legal and social bond between a man and a woman as prompted by the Sharia. ... Persian (فارسی), (local name in Iran, Afghanistan and Tajikistan: Fârsi), Pârsi (older local name, but still used by some speakers), Tajik (a Central Asian dialect) or Dari (another local name in Tajikistan and Afghanistan), is a language spoken in Iran, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Bahrain. ...


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
GEORGE PHILLIPPE TROUSSEAU (1155 words)
Dr. Robert McKibbin, with whom Dr. Trousseau was to work many times in the future, was the surgeon and Dr. Trousseau was the donor of the skin graft which was grafted onto the leg of a patient injured in a collision.
Upon Dr. Trousseau's advice, a concerted effort was made in the same year to segregate lepers, and he examined several hundred persons at the Kalihi Receiving Hospital for suspected cases of leprosy.
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Victorian Bridal Trousseau (778 words)
To the young woman planning her marriage in the 19th century, the trousseau was as important, and possibly more expensive, than the wedding.
Published illustrations of “Gowns from the Trousseau of the Princess Beatrice” revealed that they were fashionable but restrained; the queen’s daughter was apparently more comfortable wearing tam o’shanters than tiaras and more likely to carry an umbrella than a diamond-studded parasol.
By the end of the century, the focus of the trousseau-at least for the average bride-has shifted entirely from fashionable clothing to underclothes, preferably enough to last for the rest of her life.
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