CrossRef Open Access 2022

Involuntary Separations: Catholic Wives, Imprisoned Husbands, and State Authority

Susan M. Cogan

Abstrak

In the 1580s and 1590s, the English state required that all subjects of the crown attend the Protestant state church. Those who refused (called recusants) faced imprisonment as part of the government’s attempt to bring them into religious conformity. Those imprisonments forced involuntary marital separation onto Catholic couples, the result of which was to disrupt traditional gender roles within Catholic households. Separated wives increasingly fulfilled the work their husbands performed in addition to their own responsibilities as the matriarch of a landed estate. Gentlewomen were practiced at estate business since they worked in partnership with their husbands, but a spouse’s imprisonment often meant that wives wrote more petitions and settled more legal and financial matters than they did when their husbands were at liberty. The state also imprisoned Catholic wives who undermined the religious conformity of their families and communities. Spousal imprisonment deprived couples of conjugal rights and spousal support and emphasized the state’s power to interfere in marital relationships in early modern England.

Penulis (1)

S

Susan M. Cogan

Format Sitasi

Cogan, S.M. (2022). Involuntary Separations: Catholic Wives, Imprisoned Husbands, and State Authority. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy6040079

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Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2022
Bahasa
en
Sumber Database
CrossRef
DOI
10.3390/genealogy6040079
Akses
Open Access ✓