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<title>Marriage And Family In The Middle Ages</title>
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<namePart>Gies, Frances</namePart>
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<publisher>Harper &#38; Row Publishers</publisher>
<dateIssued>1987</dateIssued>
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<note>A comprehensive and illuminating history of the development of marriage and the family in the Middle Ages written by the authors of the bestselling Life in a Medieval Castle and Life in a Medieval City.

Historians have only recently awakened to the importance of the family. the basic social unit throughout human history. Long left to the anthro-pologists and sociologists, the family and marriage-its indispensable accessory-have stirred intense controversy since being taken up by early modern historians. Philippe Ariès, Edward Shorter, Peter Laslett, and others postulated a number of challenging hypotheses. Was the family in former times large in size and extended in shape, and has it undergone &#34;progressive nuclearization,&#34; or has the dominant type always been the conjugal family (parents and children)? Were the relations within the family in pre-industrial society &#34;cold.&#34; and is affectionate and humane child-raising &#34;good-mothering&#34;-a product of industrializa-tion? Were women formerly chattels with few rights in a male-dominated world? Research now permits a synthesis of the findings of modern scholars into a coherent account of the development of marriage and the family through the thousand years of the Middle Ages, from the fall of the Roman Empire to the early modern era.</note>
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