Gender, Law and Material Culture

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Aeolian Archipelago
Category=NH
Category=NHD
Census
CET
Cpl
customary law Europe
Dowry
Dowry Contract
Early Modern
Early modern Europe
English common law
Enslaved People
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Gender category
gendered property regimes analysis
Immobile Property
Immovable Goods
Immovable Property
inheritance practices
intergenerational wealth transfer
Landed Property
legal anthropology
Marital Goods
Marital Property
Marital Property Regimes
Marriage Contracts
Marriage Portion
Married Women
Material culture
Morning Gift
Movable Goods
Movable Property
Omnipresent
Private Property
social stratification history
Til
Vice Versa
womenaEUR(TM)s property rights

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367371791
  • Weight: 566g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Oct 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This interdisciplinary volume discusses the division of the early modern material world into the important legal, economic, and personal categories of mobile and immobile property, possession, and the rights to usufruct.

The chapters describe and compare different modes of acquisition and intergenerational transfer via law and custom. The varying perspectives, including cultural history, legal history, social and economic history, philosophy, and law, allow for a more nuanced understanding of the links between the movability of an object and the gender of the person who owned, possessed, or used it. Case studies and examples come from a wide geographical range, including Norway, England, Scotland, the Holy Roman Empire, Italy, Tyrol, the Ottoman Empire, Greece, Romania, and the European colonies in Brazil and Jamaica. By covering both urban and rural areas and exploring all social groups, from ruling elites to the lower strata of society, the chapters offer fresh insight into the division of mobile and immobile property that socially and economically posed disadvantages for women.

By exploring a broad scope of topics, including landownership, marriage contracts, slaveholding, and the dowry, this book is an essential resource for both researchers and students of women’s history, social and economic history, and material culture.

Annette Caroline Cremer is an assistant professor in the history faculty at Giessen University, Germany. She has published several books in the fields of material culture research, European cultural history in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, court culture, and gender history.