English rural societies and geographical marital endogamy, 17001837
K. D. M. Snell
Abstract
This article studies 69 rural parishes in eight English counties, examining changes in geographical marital endogamy. It discovers a consistent upward trend in the proportions of marriages that were parochially endogamous, coupled with a decline in so called foreign marriages following Hardwickess Act (1753), and a striking shift towards marriages taking place in the brides parishes. It explores regional variability in parochial endogamy and stresses the role of settlement sizes. The explanation for rising endogamy highlights factors such as population growth, rising poor relief expenditures, and attitudes resistant to outsiders during a period of precarious subsistence and associated tensions.
Article Type: OA
Page range: 262 - 298
Extent: 0 Page(s)
