research notes--FMA alternate history--marriage
Does anyone know if Hughes ever flashes his and Gracia's wedding pics? I would dearly love to know if she wore a white dress. White dresses for weddings were popularized by Queen Victoria's wedding to Prince Albert; before then, people tended to buy a dress they could use as a fancy/formal evening gown later on. And does the world of FMA have a Queen Victoria? And would she have worn white?
ETA: Does anyone know what hand Hughes and Gracia wear their rings on? Germany's one of those weird countries where you wear it on the right hand, not the left; I wonder if Amestris is the same./ETA ETA2: The answer to that seems to be left hand, but I'm wondering if he didn't wear it when he was on duty, because the thing is so damn tricky to find./ETA2 ETA4: Heh. By complete and total accident (ie, changing my google prefs in the middle of image-searching Gracia), I discovered that "moderate safe search" blocks
ponderosa121's site. Even though the Gracia pic she's done is not remotely risqué. But you know. We might find other things of nekkidity on her site. *snicker*/ETA4 ETA5: OMG, this is the scariest thing ever. BTW, why is Scar's brother called Bruce?/ETA5
ETA3: A lot of places have laws now that marriages have to be conducted in a public forum. (Australia is one that doesn't.) *ponder* /ETA3
Before about the 1540s, pretty much all marriages were common-law marriages. Apparently a lot of them did occur in churches out of expectations of family, but it was not required. Hell, witnesses weren't required. Specific vows weren't required. Marriage license, not required. You and your sweetie just agreed you were married, possibly with your parents' consent if you were like, 14.
In the mid-1500s, the church took an interest. Roman Catholic church started demanding its members have church weddings (not sure of the date on this one) and in England, there was a law passed that you had to be married by the CoE for it to be legal (unless you were a Quaker or a Jew).
But in Amestris... in Amestris... *taps lip* If the point of split is around 1500, and religion in Europe pretty much died, would the church have been in any position to demand... anything? I really wish I knew at what point Christianity kicked it, because it might be they had a last gasp and "OMG DO THIS" before they got squashed, and some pseudoreligous traditions may hang on in Amestris.
Even more interesting, the state interest in marriage really comes secondarily to the church interest, historically. The CoE thing was mid-1500s, but England didn't demand people get civil marriage licenses until 17something (in reaction to Fleet marriages--thousands of people getting married in Fleet Prison). Does Amestris give a damn about who marries who? Do you have to register with the state? Is there a state ceremony or certificate-signing or something? Does a civil servant have to preside? Can a military officer do it?
Traditions which are old enough to precede the split, and might still exist in Amestris:
--carrying wife over the threshold (Plutarch was analyzing the origins of this in the first century AD, and the conclusions are kind of icky; stuff like, reenactment of the Rape of the Sabines, or the woman only gives up her virginity when dragged into the house by her husband, or as a symbol of such fidelity that she enters the house carried by him and will only leave the house the same way)
--bachelor party (thought to originate with bachelor dinner in ancient Sparta)
--honeymoon (though possibly not as a "go someplace nice," just as a general period of romanticism)
--wedding cake (old, old tradition, involving cutting it with a sword)
Traditionsprobably not present that would have to have evolved parallel-ly in Amestris:
--bridal registry: The concept of a bridal registry was first instituted by Chicago-founded department store Marshall Fields in 1924, and has since been turned into a well-known experience of many large stores. (Drat, there goes the china patterns joke)
--that whole wearing white thing
Would love to hear further thoughts on this. *waves at flist*
ETA: Does anyone know what hand Hughes and Gracia wear their rings on? Germany's one of those weird countries where you wear it on the right hand, not the left; I wonder if Amestris is the same./ETA ETA2: The answer to that seems to be left hand, but I'm wondering if he didn't wear it when he was on duty, because the thing is so damn tricky to find./ETA2 ETA4: Heh. By complete and total accident (ie, changing my google prefs in the middle of image-searching Gracia), I discovered that "moderate safe search" blocks
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ETA3: A lot of places have laws now that marriages have to be conducted in a public forum. (Australia is one that doesn't.) *ponder* /ETA3
Before about the 1540s, pretty much all marriages were common-law marriages. Apparently a lot of them did occur in churches out of expectations of family, but it was not required. Hell, witnesses weren't required. Specific vows weren't required. Marriage license, not required. You and your sweetie just agreed you were married, possibly with your parents' consent if you were like, 14.
In the mid-1500s, the church took an interest. Roman Catholic church started demanding its members have church weddings (not sure of the date on this one) and in England, there was a law passed that you had to be married by the CoE for it to be legal (unless you were a Quaker or a Jew).
But in Amestris... in Amestris... *taps lip* If the point of split is around 1500, and religion in Europe pretty much died, would the church have been in any position to demand... anything? I really wish I knew at what point Christianity kicked it, because it might be they had a last gasp and "OMG DO THIS" before they got squashed, and some pseudoreligous traditions may hang on in Amestris.
Even more interesting, the state interest in marriage really comes secondarily to the church interest, historically. The CoE thing was mid-1500s, but England didn't demand people get civil marriage licenses until 17something (in reaction to Fleet marriages--thousands of people getting married in Fleet Prison). Does Amestris give a damn about who marries who? Do you have to register with the state? Is there a state ceremony or certificate-signing or something? Does a civil servant have to preside? Can a military officer do it?
Traditions which are old enough to precede the split, and might still exist in Amestris:
--carrying wife over the threshold (Plutarch was analyzing the origins of this in the first century AD, and the conclusions are kind of icky; stuff like, reenactment of the Rape of the Sabines, or the woman only gives up her virginity when dragged into the house by her husband, or as a symbol of such fidelity that she enters the house carried by him and will only leave the house the same way)
--bachelor party (thought to originate with bachelor dinner in ancient Sparta)
--honeymoon (though possibly not as a "go someplace nice," just as a general period of romanticism)
--wedding cake (old, old tradition, involving cutting it with a sword)
Traditions
--bridal registry: The concept of a bridal registry was first instituted by Chicago-founded department store Marshall Fields in 1924, and has since been turned into a well-known experience of many large stores. (Drat, there goes the china patterns joke)
--that whole wearing white thing
Would love to hear further thoughts on this. *waves at flist*