
A Good Marriage
Historian Helen Castor reveals how the Catholic church tried to control marriage from the 12th century onwards, as a way to contain the troubling issue of sex.
Unlike birth and death, which are inescapable facts of life, marriage is rite of passage made by choice and in the Middle Ages it wasn't just a choice made by bride and groom - they were often the last pieces in a puzzle, put together by their parents, with help from their family and friends, according to rules laid down by the church.
Helen Castor reveals how in the Middle Ages marriage was actually much easier to get into than today - you could get married in a pub or even a hedgerow simply by exchanging words of consent - but from the 12th century onwards the Catholic church tried to control this conjugal free-for-all. For the church, marriage was a way to contain the troubling issue of sex, but, as the film reveals, it was not easy to impose rules on the most unpredictable human emotions of love and lust.
Last on
Clip
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Stew Lane and William Hobbes
Duration: 01:11
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Helen Castor |
Series Producer | Lucy Swingler |
Director | Lucy Swingler |
Broadcasts
- Wed 16 Oct 2013 21:00
- Thu 17 Oct 2013 02:30
- Sun 20 Oct 2013 22:00
- Wed 4 Jun 2014 20:00
- Thu 5 Jun 2014 01:15
- Mon 27 Apr 2015 20:00
- Tue 28 Apr 2015 03:00
- Wed 12 Jul 2017 00:30
- Tue 21 Aug 2018 02:00