Continuing my trend of listening to historical audiobooks, I came across the first-century Roman historian Tacitus's descriprion of the various Germanic barbarian tribes of Europe. It was a quick and concise listen after the sprawling mass of book 1 from Herodotus' Histories.
The reason I bring it up here is because of his description of early Germanic marriage customs. I've occasionally heard the claim that Greeks and Romans were the ones that created monogamy, but Tacitus praises the Germanic tribes for also being almost totally monogamous. However, he does say that they're nearly unique among barbarians for being so. The exceptions, he notes, are not done out of sensual desire, but for alliances of powerful chiefs.
The reason I bring it up here is because of his description of early Germanic marriage customs. I've occasionally heard the claim that Greeks and Romans were the ones that created monogamy, but Tacitus praises the Germanic tribes for also being almost totally monogamous. However, he does say that they're nearly unique among barbarians for being so. The exceptions, he notes, are not done out of sensual desire, but for alliances of powerful chiefs.
Marriage Laws. Their marriage code, however, is strict, and indeed no part of their manners is more praiseworthy. Almost alone among barbarians they are content with one wife, except a very few among them, and these not from sensuality, but because their noble birth procures for them many offers of alliance. The wife does not bring a dower to the husband, but the husband to the wife. The parents and relatives are present, and pass judgment on the marriage-gifts, gifts not meant to suit a woman's taste, nor such as a bride would deck herself with, but oxen, a caparisoned steed, a shield, a lance, and a sword. With these presents the wife is espoused, and she herself in her turn brings her husband a gift of arms. This they count their strongest bond of union, these their sacred mysteries, these their gods of marriage. Lest the woman should think herself to stand apart from aspirations after noble deeds and from the perils of war, she is reminded by the ceremony which inaugurates marriage that she is her husband's partner in toil and danger, destined to suffer and to dare with him alike both in in war. The yoked oxen, the harnessed steed, the gift of arms proclaim this fact. She must live and die with the feeling that she is receiving what she must hand down to her children neither tarnished nor depreciated, what future daughters-in-law may receive, and may be so passed on to her grandchildren.
Thus with their virtue protected they live uncorrupted by the allurements of public shows or the stimulant of feastings. Clandestine correspondence is equally unknown to men and women. Very rare for so numerous a population is adultery, the punishment for which is prompt, and in the husband's power. Having cut off the hair of the adulteress and stripped her naked, he expels her from the house in the presence of her kinsfolk, and then flogs her through the whole village. The loss of chastity meets with no indulgence; neither beauty, youth, nor wealth will procure the culprit a husband. No one in Germany laughs at vice, nor do they call it the fashion to corrupt and to be corrupted. Still better is the condition of those states in which only maidens are given in marriage, and where the hopes and expectations of a bride are then finally terminated. They receive one husband, as having one body and one life, that they may have no thoughts beyond, no further-reaching desires, that they may love not so much the husband as the married state. To limit the number of children or to destroy any of their subsequent offspring is accounted infamous, and good habits are here more effectual than good laws elsewhere.