Unfit For Marriage: Impotent Spouses On Trial In The Basque Region Of Spain, 1650-1750

The Catholic Church of early modern Europe intended the sacrament of matrimony to represent a lifelong commitment, and it allowed few grounds for the dissolution of an unhappy marriage. One was nonconsummation owing to the sexual impotency of one of the partners. Even then, an annulment was granted only after a church court had conducted a lengthy investigation of the case, soliciting testimony from numerous witnesses as well as from the aggrieved couple, and had subjected the allegedly impotent spouse (and sometimes both spouses) to an intimate physical examination.

Edward J. Behrend-Martinez has studied the transcripts of eighty-three impotency trials conducted by the ecclesiastical court of Calahorra (La Rioja), a Spanish diocese with urban and rural parishes, both Basque and Castilian. From these records, he draws a detailed, fascinating portrait of private life and public sexuality in early modern Europe. These trials were far more than a salacious inquiry into the intimate details of other people’s lives. The church valued marital sex as a cornerstone of stable society, intended not only for procreation but also for maintaining domestic harmony. Every couple’s sex life, however private in practice or intention, was a matter of public and ecclesiastical concern. Unfit for Marriage offers vivid accounts of marital sex and the role that property, gender, and personal preference played in marriage in early modern Europe. It is essential reading for anyone interested in social history, sexuality, gender studies, canon law, legal history, and the history of divorce in western Europe.

1100047660
Unfit For Marriage: Impotent Spouses On Trial In The Basque Region Of Spain, 1650-1750

The Catholic Church of early modern Europe intended the sacrament of matrimony to represent a lifelong commitment, and it allowed few grounds for the dissolution of an unhappy marriage. One was nonconsummation owing to the sexual impotency of one of the partners. Even then, an annulment was granted only after a church court had conducted a lengthy investigation of the case, soliciting testimony from numerous witnesses as well as from the aggrieved couple, and had subjected the allegedly impotent spouse (and sometimes both spouses) to an intimate physical examination.

Edward J. Behrend-Martinez has studied the transcripts of eighty-three impotency trials conducted by the ecclesiastical court of Calahorra (La Rioja), a Spanish diocese with urban and rural parishes, both Basque and Castilian. From these records, he draws a detailed, fascinating portrait of private life and public sexuality in early modern Europe. These trials were far more than a salacious inquiry into the intimate details of other people’s lives. The church valued marital sex as a cornerstone of stable society, intended not only for procreation but also for maintaining domestic harmony. Every couple’s sex life, however private in practice or intention, was a matter of public and ecclesiastical concern. Unfit for Marriage offers vivid accounts of marital sex and the role that property, gender, and personal preference played in marriage in early modern Europe. It is essential reading for anyone interested in social history, sexuality, gender studies, canon law, legal history, and the history of divorce in western Europe.

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Unfit For Marriage: Impotent Spouses On Trial In The Basque Region Of Spain, 1650-1750

Unfit For Marriage: Impotent Spouses On Trial In The Basque Region Of Spain, 1650-1750

by Edward J. Behrend-Martinez
Unfit For Marriage: Impotent Spouses On Trial In The Basque Region Of Spain, 1650-1750
Unfit For Marriage: Impotent Spouses On Trial In The Basque Region Of Spain, 1650-1750

Unfit For Marriage: Impotent Spouses On Trial In The Basque Region Of Spain, 1650-1750

by Edward J. Behrend-Martinez

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Overview

The Catholic Church of early modern Europe intended the sacrament of matrimony to represent a lifelong commitment, and it allowed few grounds for the dissolution of an unhappy marriage. One was nonconsummation owing to the sexual impotency of one of the partners. Even then, an annulment was granted only after a church court had conducted a lengthy investigation of the case, soliciting testimony from numerous witnesses as well as from the aggrieved couple, and had subjected the allegedly impotent spouse (and sometimes both spouses) to an intimate physical examination.

Edward J. Behrend-Martinez has studied the transcripts of eighty-three impotency trials conducted by the ecclesiastical court of Calahorra (La Rioja), a Spanish diocese with urban and rural parishes, both Basque and Castilian. From these records, he draws a detailed, fascinating portrait of private life and public sexuality in early modern Europe. These trials were far more than a salacious inquiry into the intimate details of other people’s lives. The church valued marital sex as a cornerstone of stable society, intended not only for procreation but also for maintaining domestic harmony. Every couple’s sex life, however private in practice or intention, was a matter of public and ecclesiastical concern. Unfit for Marriage offers vivid accounts of marital sex and the role that property, gender, and personal preference played in marriage in early modern Europe. It is essential reading for anyone interested in social history, sexuality, gender studies, canon law, legal history, and the history of divorce in western Europe.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780874179576
Publisher: University of Nevada Press
Publication date: 11/28/2014
Series: Basque Series
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Edward J. Behrend-Martinez is assistant professor of history at Appalachian State University.

Table of Contents


Preface     ix
Acknowledgments     xiii
Introduction     i
Geronima Martinez de Texada v. Diego Belasco, Logrono, 1681     11
The Reforms of Bishop Pedro de Lepe Dorantes (1686-1700)     28
Impotent Women, Discarded Wives     65
The Prosecution and Sexual Persecution of Impotent Men     85
Rhetorics of Divorce, Reputation, and the Male Body     112
Conclusion     143
Tables     149
Graphs     159
Litigation Costs of Dona Maria Ygnes de Urbina     163
Notes     165
Bibliography     189
Index     201
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