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bridewealth

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bridewealth

Goods or property presented by a man's family to his prospective wife's family as part of the marriage agreement. It is common practice among many societies in Africa, Asia, and the Pacific, and some American Indian groups. In most European and South Asian countries the alternative custom is dowry.

Bridewealth is sometimes regarded as compensation to the woman's family for the loss of her productive labour, and it usually means that the children she bears will belong to her husband's family group rather than her own. It may require a large amount of valuables such as livestock, shell items, and, increasingly, cash.

Bridewealth creates webs of obligation since it must often be raised by the groom's relatives and friends, and it may function to cement alliances between kin groups (often accompanied by economic and political cooperation). It also enables the bride's family to repay debts and to marry off their own sons, and it ensures the stability of the marriage because it usually must be repaid in the case of divorce.

Western colonizers created an inflation of bridewealth by introducing cheap manufactured goods – for example, cloth, steel axes, and glass beads – thereby upsetting the delicate balance of indigenous economies and relationships.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
However, during the colonial period economic changes gave youth new sources of power that they could use to bypass older systems of bridewealth that old men had used to keep them in a position of juniority.
Yan's remarkably holistic study manages to link these psychological changes to such transformations as new architectural features in peasant housing, a shift in the nature of bridewealth from an interfamily exchange to a kind of early inheritance, a decline in family size and the fading of filial piety.
Men were also presented cloth as gifts (for example, to ease tension in a difficult marriage) or, in certain parts of Madagascar, as bridewealth.
 
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