Book contents
- Tying the Knot
- Cambridge Studies in English Legal History
- Tying the Knot
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Conception, Design, and Implementation, 1819–1837
- 3 Reactions to the Act, 1837–1854
- 4 Amendments Enacted and Reform Deferred, 1855–1872
- 5 Differences, Divisions, and Dispensing with the Registrar, 1873–1899
- 6 Competing Conceptions of Marriage, 1900–1919
- 7 Consolidating Complexity, 1920–1949
- 8 Convergence? 1950–1993
- 9 The Rise of the Wedding, 1994–2020
- 10 The Legacy of the Past and Lessons for the Future
- Index
10 - The Legacy of the Past and Lessons for the Future
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 September 2021
- Tying the Knot
- Cambridge Studies in English Legal History
- Tying the Knot
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Conception, Design, and Implementation, 1819–1837
- 3 Reactions to the Act, 1837–1854
- 4 Amendments Enacted and Reform Deferred, 1855–1872
- 5 Differences, Divisions, and Dispensing with the Registrar, 1873–1899
- 6 Competing Conceptions of Marriage, 1900–1919
- 7 Consolidating Complexity, 1920–1949
- 8 Convergence? 1950–1993
- 9 The Rise of the Wedding, 1994–2020
- 10 The Legacy of the Past and Lessons for the Future
- Index
Summary
Decisions made in the nineteenth century continue to have an impact on how couples marry in the twenty-first. But so much of the current law regulating weddings has come about by chance. Legislators have responded to specific problems and situations by making what might seem to be minor amendments to the legislation but which at best create new anomalies and at worst change the options available to couples entirely. Examining how and why particular provisions were included reveals how many were stop-gap measures that were never intended to be permanent, or were introduced as afterthoughts, without full consideration of their implications, or were intended to serve an entirely different purpose from that which is now attributed to them. The law should reflect how twenty-first-century couples wish to marry, rather than how nineteenth-century lawmakers thought they should.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Tying the KnotThe Formation of Marriage 1836–2020, pp. 261 - 274Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021