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Marriage Ties in England in First Half of 17th Century: Sermons to Newlyweds by Thomas Gateaker

https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2021-8-478-490

Abstract

The author of the article examines the evolution of ideas about marriage and matrimonial duties in the 17th century in England. The study is based on sermons to newlyweds published in the 1620s by the famous moderate Puritan Thomas Gataker: “A Summary of Marital Responsibilities” (1620), “A Good Wife is a Gift of God” (1620/23), and “A Perfect Wife” (1623). It is emphasized that these sermons are a rich source of early modern marriage. Addressing them allows us to understand the origins of changes in traditional gender practices introduced by the Puritans in the 17th century. The author demonstrates that, unlike Anglicans and Catholics, Puritans put the friendship between a man and a woman in the first place for the purpose of marriage, which serves as a salvation from loneliness, and not the birth of children. The author also concludes that the Puritans relied on traditional ideas about the patriarchal foundations of the marriage union, but the place and role of women in it was actively revised and fe-male virtue began to take its rightful place in a pious community.

About the Author

K. A. Sozinova
Ural Federal University named after the First President of Russia B.N. Yeltsin
Russian Federation

Ksenia A. Sozinova - PhD in History, Senior Lecturer, Department of Foreign Regional Studies.

Yekaterinburg.



References

1. Gataker, T. (1620). Marriage duties briefly couched together; out of Colossians, 3, 18, 19. London: Printed by William Jones. 48 p.

2. Gataker, T. (1623a). A good wife, God’s gift; and, A Wife indeed: two mariage sermons. London: Printed by John Haviland for Fulke Clifton.

3. Gataker, T. (1623b). A good wife, God’s gift. London: Printed by John Haviland for Fulke Clifton. 24 p.

4. Gataker, T. (1623c). A Wife indeed. London: Printed by John Haviland for Fulke Clifton. 67 p.

5. Genesis 1:22. In: Bible Center. Available at: https://www.bible-center.ru/ru/bibletext/synnew_ru/ge/1:20-22 (accessed 21.01.2021). (In Russ).

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8. Milton, J. (1959). Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce. In: Complete Prose Works of John Milton, ed. Don M. Wolfe et al., 4 vols., II. New Haven: Yale University Press. 840 p.

9. Perkins, W. (1609). Christian oeconomie: or, A short survey of the right manner of erecting and ordering a familie according to the scriptures. London: Imprinted by Felix Kyngston, and are to be sold by Edmund Weauer. 175 p.

10. Barnes, D. G. (2017). Wifely “Affection and Disposition”: Brilliana Harley and Thomas Ga-taker’s A Wife in Deed (1623). English Studies, 98 (7): 717—732. DOI: 10.1080/0013838X.2017.1339988.

11. Johnson, J. T. (1969). English Puritan Thought on the Ends of Marriage. Church History. December, 38 (4): 429—436.

12. Willen, D. (1992). Godly Women in Early Modern England: Puritanism and Gender. Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 43 (4): 561—580.

13. Willen, D. (2007). Thomas Gataker and the Use of Print in the English Godly Community. Huntington Library Quarterly, 70 (3): 343—364. DOI: 10.1525/hlq.2007.70.3.343.


Review

For citations:


Sozinova K.A. Marriage Ties in England in First Half of 17th Century: Sermons to Newlyweds by Thomas Gateaker. Nauchnyi dialog. 2021;(8):478-490. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2021-8-478-490

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ISSN 2225-756X (Print)
ISSN 2227-1295 (Online)