Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 February 2010
Since, as discussed in earlier chapters, it has been widely supposed among commentators that the mere exchange of consent constituted a valid marriage before March 1754, little attention has been paid to the status of marriages that were celebrated according to religious rites other than those of the Church of England. It has simply been assumed that dissenters did marry according to their own rites and that such ceremonies were valid, if perhaps clandestine in the eyes of the law, since they would have the same status as a contract per verba de praesenti. Yet once it has been established that such a contract was not regarded as a marriage, questions about the status of such ceremonies inevitably arise. Were the marriages of Protestant dissenters treated as no more than contracts, or did the fact that the marriage was celebrated by a minister, albeit a dissenting one, make any difference to the status of such ceremonies? And what about Quaker marriages, which involved no minister, or those of Catholics, who were prevented from practising their faith freely, or those of non-Christians?
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