Between two cities: Jewish women and exogamous marriage in medieval Catalonia.

Autor: Ifft Decker, Sarah
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Medieval History; Sep2019, Vol. 45 Issue 4, p481-503, 23p
Abstrakt: In the marriage strategies of medieval Catalan Jews, the economic security of women came second to the economic goals of families. Exogamous marriages – marriages between the Jewish communities of two different cities – exacerbated the vulnerability of Jewish wives, widows and divorcées, due in large part to restrictions on women's travel. Women who moved in order to marry experienced greater difficulty in managing financial resources and lost access to kinship networks. When women married men from other cities, at best they found themselves unable to take advantage of the connections created by their marriages. At worst, they risked financial loss if their husbands absconded to other cities with their dowries. Five case studies drawn from thirteenth- and fourteenth-century Catalan notarial registers reveal some of the ways in which exogamous marriages disadvantaged Jewish women. The extreme case of exogamy delineates the boundaries of possibility for Jewish women in the medieval Western Mediterranean. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index