Protestant Legislation on Marriage 
1. The Reform of Marriage
The following chart describes the progress of Protestant legislation concerning marriage as it evolved among the city-states and territories of southern Germany and Switzerland. It distinguishes among several phases in this process--for in most places, Protestant marriage was not instituted all at once. Instead, marriage law went through several, fairly predictable stages before culminating in the promulgation of a comprehensive Marriage Law Code, such as that of the Duchy of Württemberg. The first column identifies the polity in question; these are subdivided into municipal jurisdictions and territorial states. Imperial cities are identified in red. The second column indictates the year in which clerical celibacy was a rejected--as clear an indication as any of a polity's intention to replace canon law with a secularized system of marriage regulation based on Protestant norms. The third indicates when the jurisdiction of the church was offically ruptured. The fourth column shows the year in which a secular court was established in place of the ecclesiastical tribunal. The letters "M", "C", and "G" indicate with the court in question was a Marriage Court (M) uniquely charged with the supervision of marriage law; an Ecclesiastical Consistory (C), such as those of Geneva and Emden, which were also charged with church governance and the maintenance of doctrinal purity; or some existing governmental organ (G). The fifth and final column shows when a comprehensive marriage law code was adopted.

Municipal Jurisdictions:
Zürich (Reformed) 1525 1525 1525 (M) 1525
Nürnberg (Evangelical) 1524-1525 1525 1526 (M) 1533
Lindau (Reformed) 1524-1525 1524 1540 (M) 1566
Bern (Reformed) 1528 1525 1528 (M) 1529
Sankt Gallen (Reformed) 1528 1526 1526 (M) 1547
Konstanz (Reformed) 1524 1527 1531 (G) 1531
Strasbourg (Reformed) 1524 1529 1529 (M) 1529
Ulm (Evangelical) 1531 1529 1534 (M) 1531
Basel (Reformed) 1529 1529 1529 (M) 1530
Memmingen (Reformed) 1526 1528 1532 (C) 1532/1569
Augsburg (Evangelical) 1524 1537 1537 (M/G) 1537
Geneva (Reformed) 1536 1536 1541 (C) 1561
Speyer (Evangelical) 1556 1556 1556 (G/C) Late 1600s

Territorial Jurisdictions:
Württemberg (Evangelical) 1524 1524 1525-1526 (M) 1537; 1553
East Prussia (Evangelical) 1525 1525 1525 (M) 1539
Albertine Saxony (Evangelical) 1539 1539 1525 (G/M) 1545
Hessen (Evangelical) 1528 1528 1567 (C) 1572
Brandenburg (Evangelical) 1539-1540 1539 1572-1573 (C) 1540; 1573
Palatinate (Reformed) 1546 1556 1563 (M/G) 1556; 1563

Source: Joel Harrington, Reordering Marriage and Society in Reformation Germany (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), 138.


2. Protestant Divorce Rates
The most radical transformation in marriage law produced by the Protestant territories and city-states was the introduction of legal divorce. As we know, the doctrine of marital indissolubility had informed all canon law on the subject, so that the mere fact of legalizing divorce on any grounds represented a major cultural shift. Luther had argued that divorce should be permitted on three grounds, namely impotence, adultery, and refusal "to fulfill conjugal duty or to live with the other person" (i.e., desertion); Jean Calvin's admitted only two, adultery and desertion; his successor, Theodore Beza, restricted the list even further by eliminating involuntary desertion. Some polities handled divorce more loosely. In Basel in 1533, for instance, divorce became legal for reason of adultery, refusal to cohabit, abuse, impotence, and conviction for a capital offense; in Strasbourg, Martin Bucer believed that justification for divorce should include witchcraft, sacrilege, a husband's sexual lewdness within his wife's sight, and marital violence. In general, however, reformers strove to keep the legal grounds for divorce as few as possible and resisted making divorce, let alone remarriage, too accessible. Few authorities, for example, followed Bucer's advice and considered physical violence as legitimate reason for ending a marriage. Such hesitation should come as no surprise, since all of them saw in marriage both a fulfillment of "divine ordinance" and a necessary restraint on the evil effects of human sexuality. It is also reflected the hesitance of Protestant marriage courts to grant actual divorces. The following chart reveals that despite the legalization of divorce, sixteenth-century Protestant polities exhibited extremely low divorce rates. The first column indicates the locality from which data on divorce rates survive; the second gives the total number of divorces granted during the period for which we possess the information; and the third column gives the annual percentage per 1,000 population.

Zürich (1523-1531) 28 0.74
Basel (1525-1592) 374 0.57
Augsburg (1537-1546) 86 0.29
Württemberg (1544-1547; 1567-1590) 221 0.02
Neuchâtel (1547-1706) 93 0.02
Zweibrücken (1557-1596) 57 0.02
Geneva (1559-1569) 3 0.01

For comparison: the United States divorce rate, 1950-2000

1950 2.6
1960 2.2
1970 3.5
1980 5.2
1990 4.7
2000 4.4

Source: Joel Harrington, Reordering Marriage and Society in Reformation Germany (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), 270.


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