登陆注册
5144600000002

第2章

Now let us see what evidence we possess as to the character of early Slavonic family law. We shall first give our authorities, and then proceed to draw our general conclusions.

The earliest evidence which we possess as to the social relations of the Eastern Slavs, whose confederacy was the beginning of the Russian State, is contained in the so-called Chronicle of Nestor. Nestor is supposed to have been a Russian monk of the eleventh century.

Contrasting the mode of life of the most civilised Slavonic nation, the Polians, who were established on the banks of the Dnieper, with that of the more barbarous tribes of Russia, Nestor, or perhaps it is better to say, the unknown author of the Chronicle which bears this name, states as follows (I translate literally): "Each tribe had its own customs, and the laws of its forefathers and its own traditions, each its own manner of life (nrav). The Polians had the customs of their fathers, customs mild and peaceful (tichi); they showed a kind of reserve (stidenie) towards the daughters of their sons and towards their sisters, towards their mothers and their parents, towards the mothers of their wives, and towards the brothers of their husbands; to all of the persons named they showed great reserve.

Amongst them the bridegroom did not go to seek his bride; she was taken to him in the evening, and the following morning they brought what was given for her.""Another Slavonic tribe, the Drevlians, according to the same chronicler, lived like beasts; they killed one another, they fed on things unclean; no marriage took place amongst them, but they captured young girls on the banks of rivers."The same author narrates that three other Slavonic tribes, the Radimich, the Viatich, and the Sever, had the same customs;they lived "in forests, like other wild animals, they ate everything unclean, and shameful things occurred amongst them between fathers and daughters-in-law. Marriages were unknown to them, but games were held in the outskirts of villages; they met at these games for dancing and every kind of diabolic amusement, and there they captured their wives, each man the one he had covenanted with. They had generally two or three wives."I have tried to give you the nearest possible translation of this old Russian text, the interpretation of which, however, gives rise to certain difficulties not yet quite settled. I will now classify, to the best of my power, the various facts which we can infer from this text. First of all, it establishes the fact that marriage in the sense of a constant union between husband and wife, was not a general institution among the Eastern Slavs.

With the exception of the more civilised Polians, no other tribe is stated to have any notion of it. Of course this does not mean that all alike were entirely ignorant of the meaning of family life. It only weans that their mode of constituting a family did not correspond to the idea which the author, who, as we have said, was a monk, entertained as to matrimonial relations. The Radimich, Viatich, and Sever captured their wives after having previously come to an agreement with them. This certainly is a method which cannot meet with the approval of a Christian, but nevertheless it is marriage. We have before us an example of what ethnologists have named "marriage by capture."The Drevlians were even less advanced as regards the intercourse between the sexes. They also had games at which women were captured; but not a word is said about any covenant entered into by the captor and his supposed victim. Neither is any mention made of these games being held on the boundaries or outskirts of villages, a fact which would point to the existence of a sort of exogamy forbidding unions between persons of the same gens. In the description which the chronicler gives of the Drevlians we have an instance of an almost unlimited licence, whilst in that of the Radimich, Viatich and Sever we find a picture of an exogamous people; contracting marriage by capture, and yet retaining from the period of almost unlimited licence a sort of family communism which appears in the relations between fathers and daughters-in-law.

No trace of this either limited or unlimited promiscuousness is to be found among the Polians, who according to our old Chronicler, "conducted themselves with much reserve" towards daughters-in-law, and sisters-in-law, towards mothers and fathers, towards fathers-in-law and brothers-in-law. They seem to have been an exogamous tribe like the Radimich, Viatich and Sever, their wives being brought to them from outside their own gens. Unlike the tribes just mentioned they did not, however, procure them by capture. It was not the custom for the bridegrooms to go in search of their wives; they received them from the hands of the parents of the women, and they then paid the sum of money previously agreed upon. This means that their mode of constituting marriage was by buying their wives. The words of the Chronicler concerning these payments is far from being clear, and Russian scholars have tried to interpret them in the sense of "dower" brought by the relatives of the wife. But it has been recently proved that no mention of "dower" is to be found in Russian charters before the fifteenth century, and that the word veno used in mediaeval Russian to designate the payment made on marriage, has no other meaning than that of pretium nuptiale, or payment made by the bridegroom to the family of the bride.(2*) The words of Tacitus concerning the dos paid amongst the German tribes by the future husband to his wife's father give precisely the meaning of the old Russian veno, and throw a light on the sort of payment which the chronicle of Nestor had in view, when speaking of the matrimonial customs of the Polians.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 觉之咒

    觉之咒

    少年与少女踏上的寻找真相之旅.......
  • 父母的情绪影响孩子的一生

    父母的情绪影响孩子的一生

    孩子有如一节节长高的幼苗,父母善于掌控情绪,才能为稚嫩的幼苗提供成长期必备的阳光雨露。本书以真实案例和心理学知识相结合的方式,讲述父母如何善于保持好情绪、控制坏情绪,巧妙地处理孩子成长过程中的各种问题。在潜移默化的影响中、丝丝入扣的启迪下,使孩子从小就懂道理、喜上进,成为令人称道的佼佼者。优秀的孩子由父母营造的良好情绪氛围养育而成。为避免家庭的情绪天空出现摧毁孩子心灵的阴霾,需要父母始终做“学而时习知”的上进者。本书为这样的父母给出了最好的提示和警励。
  • 一只小妖出墙来

    一只小妖出墙来

    【新书:《有病得治:迟迟来,药别停!》】“你是一只妖!”师公果断的指着某女。“那我为什么不会妖法呢?”某女反问。师公回答“因为你是人。”某女……“师公,我到底是人是妖?”师公呆住,陷入沉思中。“师傅,我是人是妖?”某女直接无视纠结中的师公,转头充满希望的看着自家师傅,师傅亲切地摸摸她的头,道:“你是人面兽心。”某女默了,她怎么摊上了这么一个师傅?师公,你那么呆萌为什么会教出毒舌腹黑、气死人不偿命的徒弟?
  • 带着卡牌穿越异世界

    带着卡牌穿越异世界

    我是一位教书先生,叫布柯哀,但是由于和女主角重名就改名叫布林。手里有随心塔罗,功能挺多的,就是能力不怎么固定。总之,我正在为解放奴隶而努力着,顺便变强一下就好。
  • 钗头凤

    钗头凤

    相爱三年,终成世间最毒的药,东风恶,欢情薄,错,错,错!山盟虽在,锦书难托,莫,莫,莫!
  • 一叶笙笙

    一叶笙笙

    前路漫漫,万千人影在她的眸中皆化为空无。 宋折双,如若我选择忘却你,你可会怪我? —————————————— 他望着周围肆虐的火扬手将她推出洞外笑着轻念道:“笙笙啊,唤我折双可好?” —————————————— 世间情愁,我看得清清楚楚。我本是信命的。但那一天,我的世界彻底颠倒之时。我便明白,唯有为自己做过什么,唯有扼住命运的喉咙,我才可以无悔。原谅我以往的懦弱与逃避。你可知,我愿为了你抗争命途。
  • 青铜门传奇

    青铜门传奇

    原本,我只意识到自己还不能停,我还必须走下去,因为还有一个十年。可是现在,我意识到其他人都没有停过,计划和阴谋还在继续!我必须行动了!其实只要他们活着,故事就永远不会结束,我也决不会放弃!新的探险!会让所有人、所有谜团都有一个归宿,和释怀。真正大结局!好故事正在继续!
  • 斗之巅

    斗之巅

    新书《我的杂货店很厉害》 斗气江湖,群侠并起。一个身背五尺长剑的青年,站在悬崖上。天空电闪雷鸣,“你难道就不怕,天地惩罚吗?”“怕”少年面色不变,“但是十三却不得不去,与天斗,与地争。”——————————————————群{327373686}
  • God The Invisible King

    God The Invisible King

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 山歌

    山歌

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。