| Sir Norman Lockyer - Electronic journals - 1885 - 760 pages
...appropriate a woman belonging to his own tribe exclusively to himself, still that, if he captured one belonging to another tribe, he thereby acquired an...became his exclusively, no one else having any claim to, or properly in, her. He considered that this explained the prevalence of the form of capture in... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - Electronic journals - 1885 - 662 pages
...belonging to his own tribe exclusively to PARIS himself, still thai, if he captured one l>elonging to another tribe, he thereby acquired an individual and peculiar right to her, and Ac^dimy cf Sciences, December 15. — M. Holland, Preshe bcc.-mc his exclusively, no one else haiing... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - Electronic journals - 1885 - 688 pages
...appropriate a woman belonging to his own tribe exclusively to himself, still that, if he captured one belonging to another tribe, \ he thereby acquired an individual and peculiar right lo her, and she bec?me his exclusively, no one else haung any claim to, or property in, her. He considered... | |
| Sir John Lubbock - Civilization - 1889 - 762 pages
...marriage take its origin ? The theory I have ventured to suggest as regards the former question is, that originally no man could appropriate any woman...exclusively, no one else having any claim or property in her. Thus, then, the women in such a community would fall into two classes : The one, subject no doubt to... | |
| Andrew Lang - Marriage - 1903 - 390 pages
...appropriate a woman of his own tribe exclusively to himself . . . without infringing tribal rights, but, on the other hand, if a man captured a woman belonging...exclusively, no one else having any claim or property in her' (p. 110). (I here italicise ' tribe ' and ' tribal.' Lord Avebury intends, I think, a woman of the... | |
| Folklore Society (Great Britain) - Folklore - 1911 - 964 pages
...marriage originated in Capture. " If a man captured a woman belonging to another tribe" (my italics), "he thereby acquired an individual and peculiar right to her, and she became exclusively his property, no one else having any claim on or right over her." The women, in such a... | |
| Hiram Parkes Wilkinson - China - 1926 - 262 pages
...Civilization" that "originally no man could Avebury, appropriate any woman of his own tribe p'c 'p' ' exclusively to himself, nor could any woman dedicate...no one else having any claim or property in her." Neither "female infanticide," nor "promiscuity," nor "communal marriage," nor "polyandry," nor "matriarchy,"... | |
| Anthropology - 1885 - 448 pages
...by that through the father ? The theory I have ventured to suggest as regards the formeiquestion is, that originally no man could appropriate any woman...belonging to another tribe he thereby acquired an individnal and peculiar right to her, and she became his exclusively, no one else having any claim... | |
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