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Definition and meaning of Concubinage

Definitions

concubinage (n.)

1.cohabitation without being legally married

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Merriam Webster

ConcubinageCon*cu"bi*nage (?), n.
1. The cohabiting of a man and a woman who are not legally married; the state of being a concubine.

☞ In some countries, concubinage is marriage of an inferior kind, or performed with less solemnity than a true or formal marriage; or marriage with a woman of inferior condition, to whom the husband does not convey his rank or quality. Under Roman law, it was the living of a man and woman in sexual relations without marriage, but in conformity with local law.

2. (Law) A plea, in which it is alleged that the woman suing for dower was not lawfully married to the man in whose lands she seeks to be endowed, but that she was his concubine.

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Definition (more)

definition of Wikipedia

See also

Analogical dictionary

concubinage (n.)

cohabitation[Hyper.]


Wikipedia

Concubinage

                   

Concubinage is a interpersonal relationship in which a person engages in an ongoing relationship (usually matrimonially oriented) with another person to whom they cannot be married; the inability to marry is usually due to a difference in social status or economic condition. Historically, the relationship involved a man in a higher status position, usually with a legally-sanctioned wife, who maintains a second household with the lesser "wife". The woman in such as a relationship is referred to as a concubine.

Contents

  Concubinage

  Statue of Yang Guifei (719-756), the favoured concubine of Emperor Tang Xuanzong of China.

A concubine is a woman in an ongoing, marriage-like relationship with a man whom she cannot be married to for a specific reason. It may be because she is of lower social rank (including slave status) or because the man is already married. Generally, only men of high economic and social status have concubines. Many historical rulers maintained concubines as well as wives.

Historically, concubinage was frequently voluntary (by the woman and/or her family's arrangement), as it provided a measure of economic security for the woman involved.

Under Roman law, Roman culture under the Empire came to tolerate concubinage as long as the relationship was durable and exclusive; for the jurists, concubinage was an honourable de facto situation.[1]

When having no legal status recognized, or defined in law, as in ancient China, concubinage was akin, although inferior, to marriage. The children of a concubine were recognized as legal offspring of the father; though their inheritance rights may have been inferior to younger children of a marriage, or they may have received a smaller inheritance. Men frequently used concubines to bear heirs when he and his wife were unable to produce sons.

In distinction to such systems, modern Western laws do not acknowledge the legal status of concubines and recognize only monogamous marriages. Any other relationship does not enjoy legal protection, making the woman essentially a mistress.

  Ancient Greece

In Ancient Greece, the practice of keeping a slave concubine (Greek "pallakis") was little recorded but appears throughout Athenian history. Law prescribed that a man could kill another man caught with his concubine for the production of free children (thereby implying that concubines' children were not granted citizenship).[2] While references to the sexual exploitation of maidservants appear in literature, it was considered disgraceful for a man to keep such women under the same roof as his wife.[3] Some interpretations of hetaera have held they were concubines when one had a permanent relationship with a single man.[4]

  Ancient Roman Concubinae and concubini

Concubinage was an institution practiced in ancient Rome that allowed a man to enter into an informal but recognized relationship with a woman (concubina, plural concubinae) not his wife, most often a woman whose lower social status was an obstacle to marriage. Concubinage was "tolerated to the degree that it did not threaten the religious and legal integrity of the family".[5] It was not considered derogatory to be called a concubina, as the title was often inscribed on tombstones.[6]

A concubinus was a young male slave chosen by his master as a sexual partner. Romans did not mark same-sex relations as "homosexual" if an adult male used a slave or prostitute, characteristically a youth, as his passive partner (see Homosexuality in ancient Rome); these relations, however, were expected to play a secondary role to marriage, within which institution an adult male demonstrated his masculine authority as head of household (paterfamilias). In one of his wedding poems, Catullus (fl. mid-1st century BC) assumes that the young bridegroom has a concubinus who considers himself elevated above the other slaves, but who will be set aside as his master turns his attention to marriage and family life.[7]

  In the Bible

Among the Israelites, men commonly acknowledged their concubines, and such women enjoyed the same rights in the house as legitimate wives.[8] The principal difference in the Bible between a wife and a concubine is that wives had dowries, while concubines did not.

The concubine may have commanded the same respect and inviolability as the wife. The Hebrew word used in the Levitical rules on sexual relations, which is commonly translated as "wife", is distinct from the Hebrew word that means "concubine". (However, on at least one other occasion it is used to refer a woman who is not a wife - specifically, the handmaid of Jacob's wife.[9]) In the Levitical code, sexual intercourse between a man and a wife of a different man was forbidden and punishable by death for both persons involved.[10][11] The Bible notes several incidents of intercourse between a man and another man's concubine, and none of them result in capital punishment for either party,[12][13][14] although the man to whom the concubine belonged was dishonored by such a relationship.[8] For instance, David is portrayed as having been dishonoured when his concubines had a sexual relationship with his son Absalom.[15] However, this instance is as likely dishonoring to David because it involves a form of incest, as David's concubines would have been somewhat like step-mothers to David's children.[16]

Since it was regarded as the highest blessing to have many children, legitimate wives often gave their maids to their husbands to atone, at least in part, if they were barren, as in the cases of Sarah and Hagar, Rachel and Bilhah.[8] The children of the concubine had equal rights with those of the legitimate wife;[8] for example, King Abimelech was the son of Gideon and his concubine.[17] Later[8] biblical figures such as Gideon, David, and Solomon had concubines in addition to many childbearing wives. For example, the Books of Kings says that Solomon had 700 wives and 300 concubines.[18]

  In Judaism

In Judaism, concubines are referred to by the Hebrew term pilegesh. The term is a non-Hebrew, non-Semitic loanword derived from the Greek word, pallakis, Greek παλλακίς,[19][20][21] meaning "a mistress staying in house". It has been suggested that the Aramaic phrase, palga isha, meaning half-wife, is the original term that the Greek term is based upon.[22]

According to the Babylonian Talmud,[8] the difference between a concubine and a full wife was that the latter received a marriage contract (Hebrew:ketubah) and her marriage (nissu'in) was preceded by a formal betrothal (erusin), neither being the case for a concubine. But, one opinion in the Jerusalem Talmud argues that the concubine should also receive a marriage contract, but without including a clause specifying a divorce settlement.[8]

Certain Jewish thinkers, such as Maimonides, believed that concubines are strictly reserved for kings, and thus that a commoner may not have a concubine; indeed, such thinkers argued that commoners may not engage in any type of sexual relations outside of a marriage. Before Maimonides concluded this, Sunni Muslims officially prohibited mutah (i.e. temporary marriage) relationships; some commentators'[who?] suggest that Maimonides changed his view in response to this development, similar to Gershom ben Judah's ban on polygamy being made after Christians had prohibited it.

Maimonides was not the first Jewish thinker to criticise concubinage; for example, it is severely condemned in Leviticus Rabbah.[23] Other Jewish thinkers, such as Nahmanides, Samuel ben Uri Shraga Phoebus, and Jacob Emden, strongly object to the idea that concubines should be forbidden.

In the Hebrew of the contemporary State of Israel, the word pilegesh is often used as the equivalent of the English word, mistress—i.e. the female partner in extramarital relations, regardless of legal recognition. Attempts to popularise pilegesh as a form of premarital, non-marital and extramarital relationships (which, according to the perspective of the enacting person/s, is permitted by Jewish religious law) have been initiated.[24][25][26]

  Ancient China

  A European painting of an Emperor of China inspecting his fantasy fishing fleet with his concubines

In Ancient China, successful men often supported several concubines—for example, it has been documented that Chinese Emperors accommodated numbers in the thousands.[27] A concubine's treatment and situation were highly variable, influenced by the social status of the male to whom she was engaged, as well as the attitude of the wife; the position of the concubine was generally inferior to that of the wife. Although a concubine could produce heirs, her children would be inferior in social status to "legitimate" children. Allegedly, concubines were occasionally buried alive with their masters to "keep them [masters] company in the afterlife."[27]

Despite the limitations imposed on ancient Chinese concubines, history and literature have examples of concubines achieving great power and influence. For example, in one of the Four Great Classical Novels of China, The Dream of the Red Chamber (believed to be a semi-autobiographical account of author Cao Xueqin's own family life), three generations of the Jia family are supported by one favorite concubine of the Emperor.

Imperial concubines, kept by Emperors in the Forbidden City, were traditionally guarded by eunuchs to ensure that they could not be impregnated by anyone but the Emperor.[27] Lady Yehenara, otherwise known as Dowager Empress Cixi, was arguably one of the most successful concubines in China’s history. Cixi first entered the court as a concubine to the Xianfeng Emperor and gave birth to his only surviving son, who would become the Tongzhi Emperor. She would eventually become the de facto ruler of the Manchu Qing Dynasty in China for 47 years after her son's death.[28]

  In Siam (Thailand)

In Siam (today Thailand), men were permitted to have multiple wives, whom they could sell, as well as their children. The principal wife could only be divorced. If her husband died, she inherited the property rights to the secondary wives.[29]

  In Islamic theology

  Women of the Harem by Jules Laurens, circa 1847
  Scene from the Harem by Fernand Cormon

Islamic primary sources, the Quran and the Sunnah, declare concubinage permitted (Halal) under strict conditions. Chapter 4 (Sura-e-Nisa), verse 3 of the Quran[30] states that a man may only be married to four women at the most, should he be able to treat them all fairly and equally. Islamic rights for concubines ensure fair treatment within the household and promise living expenses for concubines and their children. A Muslim man who could ensure equitable financial support among multiple spouses was allowed as many concubines as he pleased, in addition to the prescribed four wives.

Islam considers every human independent and free by birth (Deen-e-Fitrat).[31] Islam considers concubinage acceptable as a social need, but only under certain guidelines. Children of concubines must be considered as legitimate as children born in wedlock. All children must receive living and education expenses till they become independent.

Modern women rarely wish to become concubines, therefore, debates about the rights of concubines are largely irrelevant. Chattel employment is currently regarded as highly inappropriate in Islam. Islam is criticized because, in the past, Islam permitted slavery and concubinage (Halal). It is therefore important to explore the reasoning for which Islam permitted concubinage through the historical evidences mentioning practices of Muhammad in this context.[citation needed]

Two sources for concubines were permitted in an Islamic regime. Primarily, non-Muslim women taken as prisoners-of-war were made concubines. Islam forbade raping concubines captured in wars and encouraged a culture of keeping them in Muslim household where they could be motivated to embrace Islam without any coercion through affectionate and humanitarian treatment. Alternately, mutual agreement between a man and a woman could mold their relationship to concubinage because then it was an acceptable social practice. In Turkey, an odalisque could 'train' to become a concubine.

  A drunken Persian prince assaults a Chinese maiden. Miniature from Gulistan of Sa'di. Herat, 1427

The Sunnah of reports that Muhammad had two or three concubines during his life. Umm-ul-Momineen (Mother of Muslims) Rehana was a prisoner of war that Muhammad kept for himself as a concubine without Nikkah (formal marriage bond in Islam) after the battle against tribe of Bani Qariza (Ghazwa-e-Bani Qariza). Umm-ul-Momineen (Mother of Muslims) Maria Qibtia is reported to be another concubine gifted to Muhammad by the King Maqooqas in response to his letter inviting him towards Islam. The King Maqooqas in response appreciated the invitation and gifted two concubines Maria Qibtia and her sister Sirin with two horses. Muhammad kept Umm-ul-Momineen (Mother of Muslims) Maria Qibtia for himself as concubine without Nikkah. Both Rehana and Maria Qibtia were granted equivalent status and protocol in form of prestigious Muslim household as were arranged for all other wives (Ummahat-ul-Momineen). It was the highest rank and protocol in the then society of Arab that a woman could have. It was a matter of great surprise for Arabs that same protocol had been awarded to a concubine (slave women) who was not in Nikkah as giving such prestigious protocol to a concubine was against their norms and traditions. Muhammad did so to set examples that Islam equates slaves with free human and accepts no discrimination of any kind like race, gender, region, religion etc. This measure of Muhammad was necessary to curb the cruel tradition in the then Arab society of misusing handmaiden as concubine for sexual pleasures and later refuting her due rights and that of her children. Muhammad promoted concubines Maria Qibtia and Rehana as Umm-ul-Momineen (Mother of all Muslims) awarding them same splendid household, rights, privileges, protocol and status as he had ensured for all other wives who belonged to reputed race, tribes and/or families. That is how Islam negated and discourgaed the unjust attitudes and customs against slaves and concubines.[citation needed]

Muhammad and the concubine Maria Qibtia had a son, named Ibrahim. After the birth of Ibrahim, other wives of Muhammad alleged that Ibrahim was not his son, which proved not to be the case. As a result, Chapter 66 Sura-e-Tahreem of the Quran instructed Muhammad to divorce his wife for maliciously alleging a concubine Maria Qibtia. This is how, Islam set an example of equating a slave to free human where standards of justice demanded. Sura-e-Tahreem advised Muhammad to warn Ayesha Bint-e-Abu-Bakr not to commit jealousy against concubine Maria Qibtia in future. This measure of God (Allah) reinforced the significance of reserving and maintaining rights and equality for concubines in the then Arab society where earlier they were merely used for sexual pleasures without any social security and respect.[citation needed]

The above mentioned reports[clarification needed] are adopted from the authentic sources explaining Shia Islam,[32][33][34] and Sunni Islam.,[35][36][37]

In a legend shared with the Jewish tradition, Hajra (Hagar) was the 'handmaiden' of Prophet Abraham. At the directive of God/Allah, Prophet Abraham took Hagar as a concubine with the permission of his wife Sarah, who was infertile (according to Islamic sources[38]). Hajra gave birth to Prophet Ismail, the forefather of Muhammad. Abraham indeed ensured due rights of his concubine and her son.

However, as per rules of Islamic Fiqas, Halal (permitted) from Muhammad cannot be altered by any authority or individual. Therefore, the concept of concubinage stands as permitted (Halal) although concubines are no longer permitted. Change of Islamic law is not possible, but were there a concubine in the modern era, she must be given all her due rights that Islam has preserved in the past. Hence, domestic and females employees working business are not concubines and sex is forbidden, unless Nikkah or Muta (Temporary Marriage Only Permissible in Shi'ism) is committed with mutual consent. Every adult and wise woman without husband although reserves the right to accept concubinage for her employer/master without any coercion or force, but Islamic scholars have consensus that for sex relations options of Nikkah and Muta should be adopted instead of concubinage in this era.[39][citation needed]

Further, a true Islamic government reserves the right to restore and revive concubinage any time where it is considered beneficial for Islamic growth and expansion in wars against its enemies.[citation needed]

  In the United States

  Free woman of color with quadroon daughter; late 18th century collage painting, New Orleans.

When slavery became institutionalized in the North American colonies, white men, whether or not they were married, sometimes took enslaved women as concubines. Marriage between the races was prohibited by law in the colonies and the later United States. Many colonies and states also had laws against miscegenation, or any interracial relations, but the latter were generally ignored by white men[citation needed]. From 1662 the Colony of Virginia, followed by others, incorporated into law that the children took their mother's status, by the principle of partus sequitur ventrem; all children born to enslaved mothers were born into slavery, regardless of their father's status or ancestry.[40] This led to generations of mixed-race slaves, some who were otherwise considered legally white (1/8 or less African, equivalent to a great-grandparent) before the American Civil War.

In some cases, men had long-term relationships with enslaved women, giving them and their mixed-race children freedom and providing their children with apprenticeships, education and transfer of capital. In other cases, they did nothing for them except in a minor way. Such arrangements were more prevalent in the South during the antebellum years.

Historians widely believe that the widower Thomas Jefferson, both before and during his presidency of the United States in the early 19th century, had an intimate relationship of 38 years with his mixed-race slave Sally Hemings, in such an arrangement, and fathered all of her six children of record.[41] He freed all four of her surviving children as they came of age; the Hemings were the only slave family to go free from Monticello. The children were 7/8 European in ancestry and legally white. Three entered the white community as adults. A 1998 DNA study showed a match between the Jefferson male line and a male descendant of Sally Hemings.[41]

In Louisiana and former French territories, a formalized system of concubinage called placage developed. European men took enslaved or free women of color as mistresses after making arrangements to give them a dowry, house or other transfer of property, and sometimes, if they were enslaved, offering freedom and education for their children.[42] A third class of free people of color developed, especially in New Orleans.[42][43] Many became educated, artisans and property owners. French-speaking and practicing Catholics, who combined French and African-American culture, created an elite between the whites of European descent and the masses of slaves.[42] Today descendants of the free people of color are generally called Louisiana Creole people.[42]

  See also

  References

  1. ^ Paul Veyne, "The Household and its Freed Slaves", in Philippe Ariès and Georges Duby, eds, A History of Private Life !; FromPagan Rome to Byzantium 1987:76).
  2. ^ James Davidson. Courtesans and Fishcakes: The Consuming Passions of Classical Athens. p. 98. ISBN 0-312-18559-6. 
  3. ^ James Davidson. Courtesans and Fishcakes: The Consuming Passions of Classical Athens. pp. 98–99. ISBN 0-312-18559-6. 
  4. ^ James Davidson. Courtesans and Fishcakes: The Consuming Passions of Classical Athens. p. 101. ISBN 0-312-18559-6. 
  5. ^ Grimal, Love in Ancient Rome (University of Oklahoma Press) 1986:111.
  6. ^ Kiefer, Sexual Life in Ancient Rome (Kegan Paul International) 2000:50.
  7. ^ Catullus, Carmen 61; Amy Richlin, "Not before Homosexuality: The Materiality of the cinaedus and the Roman Law against Love between Men," Journal of the History of Sexuality 3.4 (1993), pp. 534–535.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Staff (2002-2011). "PILEGESH (Hebrew, ; comp. Greek, παλλακίς).". Jewish Encyclopedia. JewishEncyclopedia.com. http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=313&letter=P&search=Pilegesh. Retrieved 13 June 2012. 
  9. ^ Genesis 30:4
  10. ^ Leviticus 20:10
  11. ^ Deuteronomy 22:22
  12. ^ 2 Samuel 3:7
  13. ^ 2 Samuel 16:22
  14. ^ Judges 19:2
  15. ^ 2 Samuel 16:21-25
  16. ^ Leviticus 20:11
  17. ^ Judges 8:31
  18. ^ 1 Kings 11:1-3
  19. ^ Michael Lieb, Milton and the culture of violence, p.274, Cornell University Press, 1994
  20. ^ Agendas for the study of Midrash in the twenty-first century, Marc Lee Raphael, p.136, Dept. of Religion, College of William and Mary, 1999
  21. ^ Nicholas Clapp, Sheba: Through the Desert in Search of the Legendary Queen, p.297, Houghton Mifflin, 2002
  22. ^ Stephen Bigger (23). "Slave wives and Concubines" (Blog). 4004 BCE?. Google. http://4004bce.blogspot.com/2009/12/slave-wives-and-concubines.html. Retrieved 13 June 2012. 
  23. ^ Leviticus Rabbah, 25
  24. ^ MATTHEW WAGNER (16 March 2006). "Kosher sex without marriage". The Jerusalem Post. http://www.jpost.com/Home/Article.aspx?id=16328. Retrieved 13 June 2012. 
  25. ^ Adam Dickter, "ISO: Kosher Concubine", New York Jewish Week, December 2006
  26. ^ SUZANNE GLASS, "THE CONCUBINE CONNECTION", The Independent, London October 20, 1996
  27. ^ a b c Staff (2012). "Concubines of Ancient China". Beijing Made Easy. Beijing Made Easy. http://www.beijingmadeeasy.com/beijing-history/concubines-of-ancient-china. Retrieved 13 June 2012. 
  28. ^ Dragon lady: the life and legend of the last empress of China. Vintage Books. 1993. 
  29. ^ Michel Jacq-Hergoualch, Le Siam, Guide Belles Lettres des Civilisations, Les Belles Lettres 2004, ISBN 2-251-41023-6, pp. 210-211.
  30. ^ Al-Quran Chapter 4, Verse 3
  31. ^ Al-Quran, Chapter 5
  32. ^ Volume 2 of Hayat-ul-Qaloob by Allama Majlisi
  33. ^ Tafseer-ul-Quran by Zafar Hassan Volume 5
  34. ^ Volumes 3 – 4 of Tafseer-Namoona translated to Urdu by Allama Syed Safdar Hussain Najfi
  35. ^ Sahih Muslim
  36. ^ Sahih Bukhari
  37. ^ Seerat-un-Nabi
  38. ^ Volume 1 of Hayat-ul-Qaloob by Allama Majlisi
  39. ^ Consensus of Islamic Scholars on Nikkah as per various online lectures
  40. ^ Peter Kolchin, American Slavery, 1619-1877, New York: Hill and Wang, 1993, p. 17
  41. ^ a b "Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: A Brief Account", Monticello Website, Thomas Jefferson Foundation, accessed 22 June 2011. Quote: "Ten years later [referring to its 2000 report], TJF and most historians now believe that, years after his wife’s death, Thomas Jefferson was the father of the six children of Sally Hemings mentioned in Jefferson's records, including Beverly, Harriet, Madison and Eston Hemings."
  42. ^ a b c d Helen Bush Caver and Mary T. Williams, "Creoles", Multicultural America, Countries and Their Cultures Website, accessed 3 Feb 2009
  43. ^ Peter Kolchin, American Slavery, 1619-1865, New York: Hill and Wang, 1993, pp. 82-83

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