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marriage
(redirected from Secular marriage)

   Also found in: Legal, Financial, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.07 sec.

marriage

Legally or culturally sanctioned union of one man and one woman (monogamy); one man and two or more women (polygamy); one woman and two or more men (polyandry). The basis of marriage varies considerably in different societies (romantic love in the West; arranged marriages in some other societies), but most marriage ceremonies, contracts, or customs involve a set of rights and duties, such as care and protection, and there is generally an expectation that children will be born of the union to continue the family line and maintain the family property.

In the 1990s, the concept of marriage was extended in some countries to include the blessing or registration of homosexual relationships.

In different cultures and communities there are various conventions and laws that limit the choice of a marriage partner. Restrictive factors include: age limits, below which no marriage is valid; degrees of relationship by blood (consanguinity) or other special relationships within which marriage is either forbidden or enjoined; economic factors such as ability to pay a dowry; rank, caste, or religious differences or expectations; medical requirements, such as the blood tests of some US states; the necessity of obtaining parental, family, or community consent; the negotiations of a marriage broker in some cultures, as in Japan or formerly among Jewish communities; colour – for example, marriage was illegal until 1985 between ‘European’ and ‘non-European’ people in South Africa, until 1967 between white and black people in some southern US states, and between white and Asian people in some western US states.

Rights

In Western cultures, social trends have led to increased legal equality for women within marriage: in England, married women were not allowed to hold property in their own name until 1882; in California, community property laws entail the equal division of all assets between the partners on divorce. Other legal changes have made divorce easier, notably in the USA and increasingly in the UK, so that remarriage is more and more frequent for both sexes within the lifetime of the original partner.

Law

In most European countries and in the USA, civil registration of marriage, as well as (or instead of) a religious ceremony, is obligatory. Common-law marriages (that is, cohabitation as man and wife without a legal ceremony) are recognized (for inheritance purposes) in, for example, Scotland and some states of the USA. As a step to international agreement on marriage law, the United Nations (UN) in 1962 adopted a convention on consent to marriage, minimum age for marriage, and registration. In April 2000, Vermont became the first US state that entitled gay and lesbian couples to the full legal benefits of marriage.

The US marriage rate fell 43% from 1960 to 1996, according to figures released in July 1999 by the National Marriage Project. The median marriage age rose from 20 to 25 for women and 23 to 27 for men. About one-fourth of unmarried women of the ages 25 to 39 live with a partner.



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