Indian Marriage Before and After the Council of Trent: From pre-Hispanic Marriage to Christian Marriage in New Spain*

This article, based on the canonical norms and the manuals for parish priests in its various modal- ities, analyses the problems of assimilating marriage practices among Indians, as well as the discussions and the solutions adopted by the first canonists of New Spain. These relied on natural law, can...

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Autor Principal: Zaballa Beascoechea, Ana de, 1958-
Publicado en: Rechtsgeschichte-Legal History N. 27, 2019, p. 90-104
Tipo de contenido: Artículo
Idioma: Castellano
Publicado: 2019
ISSN: 1619-4993
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Acceso en línea: Texto completo
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Sumario: This article, based on the canonical norms and the manuals for parish priests in its various modal- ities, analyses the problems of assimilating marriage practices among Indians, as well as the discussions and the solutions adopted by the first canonists of New Spain. These relied on natural law, canon law and indigenous legislation. At the same time, through the pastoral practice gathered in the aforementioned sources, what can be shown is the adaptation of the doctrine on Catholic marriage to the local and particular aspects of indigenous reality, the permanence of pre-Hispanic customs, as well as the incorporation of certain corrupt European practices, such as clandestine marriage. What emerges is an active indigenous population who showed initiative regarding the prevailing legal culture and everything that could be useful for them in the new established order.
ISSN: 1619-4993