1 / 34

Chapter 20 Part 1

Chapter 20 Part 1. Life in the 18 th Century. Marriage and the family before 1750. The Nuclear family still most common in pre-industrial Europe Young married couples established their homes apart from their parents

dionne
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 20 Part 1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 20Part 1 Life in the 18th Century

  2. Marriage and the family before 1750 • The Nuclear family still most common in pre-industrial Europe • Young married couples established their homes apart from their parents • Sometimes, though, 3-generations: an older parent sometimes went to live with a married child

  3. Before 1750 marriage age was high • Especially for poorer classes • Late 20’s or older for both men and women • A couple could not marry unless they could support themselves • Sometimes young men had to wait until their fathers died to gain land through inheritance • Young women and their families had to come up with a dowry

  4. In some areas legal permission from the local lord was needed to marry • Austria and many German states had legal restrictions on marriage well into the 19th century • Belief that without legal restrictions regulating marriage, lower classes would create more paupers and abandoned children and more government money would be needed for welfare

  5. BUT • Often these legal restrictions helped to maintain some balance between population and limited resources

  6. Many never married • 40-60% of women between the ages of 15 and 44 were unmarried at any given time

  7. Children (Before 1750) • Illegitimate birth rate was fairly low • Due to the powerful social controls of traditional villages, especially the open-field ones • If a pregnancy occurred parents, priests, landlords, village elders pressured the couple to marry

  8. Premarital sex • Was generally limited to couples who were considering marriage anyway

  9. Numbers of children per family • If the husband and wife lived to the age of 45, about 50% gave birth to 6 or more children • High infant mortality rate: 50% survival rate into adulthood was considered good • 20% in economically viable areas • 33% in poorer areas

  10. After 1750 • New patterns of marriage and legitimacy • The increased incomes resulting from cottage industries meant more married for love instead of just for economic reasons • Young people became financially independent earlier

  11. Arranged marriages • For economic reasons declined • Laws and regulations on marriage (especially in Germany) were ignored • After 1780 factory workers followed the same pattern as cottagers

  12. Between 1750 and 1850 • The explosion of births was due to the explosion of illegitimate births • Fewer girls abstained from premarital sex • Fewer boys were willing to marry the girls they impregnated

  13. Mobility • Encouraged new sexual and marital relationships • In towns and cities young people were removed from the pressures of the village elders, landlords, parents, and priests • In Germany, though, it was different

  14. Germany • Illegitimate births were the result of an open rebellion against the legal restrictions • How do we know? • The illegitimate birth rate declined when the restrictions were removed

  15. Women • Women in cities and factory towns had limited economic independence • Young women were NOT motivated by hopes of emancipation and sexual liberation • Most hoped for marriage as a way to escape their difficult lifestyles • Often poor economic and social conditions scared men away from commitment

  16. Changing attitudes toward children in the 18th century • Poorer women breast –fed their children much longer than women in the 20th century • The decreased fertility while breast-feeding aided in the spacing of children to 2 to 3 years apart • Mothers’ milk was healthier than other foods anyway and more infants survived

  17. But • Women who were aristocrats and upper middle class women (also wives of well-to-do artisans) rarely breast-fed • They believed that breast-feeding was crude, common, and beneath their dignity • Many sent their children to the countryside • Wet-nurses were hired to breast-feed these children • Children were wet-nursed there for 2 to 3 years • Negligence was not uncommon…Killing Nurses

  18. Infanticide • The early Medieval Church viewed each life as sacred and denounced infanticide • BUT severe poverty was an issue throughout human history and infanticide was rampant • Often “overlaying” occurred: a parent rolling over and suffocating a child in bed

  19. Foundling Hospitals • Many poor women left their infants on the doorsteps of churches • By 1770 1/3 of all babies born in Paris were immediately abandoned • 1/3 of these babies were from married couples • Foundling hospitals in Paris first then all over • St. Vincent de Paul began as a Foundling Hospital group

  20. St Petersburg • A foundling hospital in St. Petersburg cared for 25,000 babies in the early 19th century • The above received 5,000 a year • Half of those babies died within a year • In some foundling hospitals 90% died the first year

  21. Some claimed • That Foundling Hospitals promoted “legalized infanticide”

  22. Child-rearing • High infant mortality rates discouraged parents to become too emotionally attached to their children • Doctors often refused to treat sick children believing that little could be done • Children were often treated with indifference • Wet-nursing is a good example

  23. Daniel Defoe: • Wrote Robinson Crusoe • Said, “Spare the rod and spoil the child.” • Many believed that a parent’s job was to break the will of the child and make him obedient • Children were subject to harsh discipline

  24. The Enlightenment and Humanitarian Movements • Encouraged better treatment of children • Rousseau encouraged greater love and understanding • Children began to survive infancy and live longer • Parents began to grow closer to their children

  25. Work away from home • In the countryside, young people worked within their families until they could start their own households • Boys ploughed in the fields or wove in the cottage industry • Girls spun thread and tended the farm animals

  26. Increasingly, Boys worked away from home • Boys in towns had opportunities to apprentice themselves to a craftsman for a period of 7 to 14 years • Boys could learn a trade or be admitted to a guild after the apprentice period • They could not marry during this period • Most drifted from one tough job to another

  27. Girls working away from home • Had limited opportunities • The most common job was domestic service in another family’s household • Most hoped to send money to their parents or save money for marriage • Was one less mouth for their parents to feed

  28. Servant Girls • Had little real independence • They were vulnerable to physical mistreatment by their mistresses • They were vulnerable to sexual advances of their male employers • The upper classes often exploited their servants • A pregnant servant girl was quickly fired • Petty theft and prostitution were the only other options

  29. Education • The beginning of formal education for the masses took root • Was inspired by Protestantism and the belief that all Christians should be able to read the Bible • The aristocracy and wealthy had a two-century head start with special colleges run by Jesuits

  30. In the 17th century • “little schools” of elementary education began to appear • Boys and girls 7-12 were instructed in basic literacy and religion • By 1682 France established Christian schools which taught reading, writing and religion

  31. England • The Church of England and other dissenting religious groups founded “charity schools” for poor children • In 1717 Prussia was the first for compulsory education • Remember…an educated citizen could better serve the state

  32. Scotland • Created a network of parish schools for all citizens to be able to read the scriptures

  33. The Enlightenment • Philosophers and philosophes believed that education was the key to human progress • Had a commitment to critical thinking and reinforced interest in education throughout Europe

  34. Results 1600 1800 Scotland 1 in 6 (males) literate 90% England 1 in 4 (males) literate 50% France 1 in 6 (males) literate 66% Women increasing literacy but lagged behind men

More Related