In England and Wales, the Marriage Act 1753, also called Lord Hardwicke's Marriage Act (citation 26 Geo. II. c. 33), required formal ceremony of marriage, thus abolishing common-law marriage. The act required that if both parties to a marriage were not at least 21 years old, then consent to the marriage had to be given by the parents. Even with consent, parties were not allowed to be married unless the male was at least 14 years old and the female was at least 12.
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- In England and Wales, the Marriage Act 1753, also called Lord Hardwicke's Marriage Act (citation 26 Geo. II. c. 33), required formal ceremony of marriage, thus abolishing common-law marriage. The act required that if both parties to a marriage were not at least 21 years old, then consent to the marriage had to be given by the parents. Even with consent, parties were not allowed to be married unless the male was at least 14 years old and the female was at least 12. Previously, people could be married at as early as seven years of age, but until the participants reached the age of consent of 14 and 12 years, such marriages could be voided easily. The act was precipitated by a dispute about inheritance in a Scottish marriage. When the act was passed, it required, under pain of nullity, that banns should be published according to the rubric, or a license obtained, and that, in either case, the marriage should be solemnized in church (except for Jews and Quakers); and that in the case of minors, marriage by license must be by the consent of parent or guardian. The act came into effect in 1754, and exempted Scotland and the Channel Islands (although not applying in Temple, Cornwall until 1774). The law set forth much stricter rules regarding marriage, including that marriages must be performed in a church and must be officially recorded. Children of marriages that did not meet these requirements could not inherit property. Such children were considered 'base'. This act had the effect of putting a stop to clandestine marriages, e.g. the Fleet Marriages associated with Fleet Prison. Henceforth couples had to fare to Gretna Green or other Scottish Border Villages which were outside the jurisdiction of English law. This was the first Act which specifically recognised the practices of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in their marriage procedures, including allowing marriage without an officiant and marriage not in a church building, and recognised these in law Henry Fox who had himself engaged in an elopement a few years before took the Act as a personal insult towards him by the Lord Chancellor Lord Hardwicke.
- Marriage Act (1753) znany tez jako Lord Hardwicke's Marriage Act - ustawa parlamentu brytyjskiego z 1753 roku określająca minimalny wiek wymagany do tego by małżeństwo było legalne. Do jej pomysłodawców należał ówczesny premier Henry Pelham. Ustawa wymagała by chcący się pobrać mieli co najmniej 21 lat, jeśli byli młodsi wymagana była zgoda rodziców. Marriage Act wchodził w życie w 1754 roku. Nie obowiązywał jednak w takich rejonach jak Wyspy Normandzkie i Szkocja.
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- Marriage Act (disambiguation)
- other marriage-related legislation
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- Parliament of Great Britain
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- In England and Wales, the Marriage Act 1753, also called Lord Hardwicke's Marriage Act (citation 26 Geo. II. c. 33), required formal ceremony of marriage, thus abolishing common-law marriage. The act required that if both parties to a marriage were not at least 21 years old, then consent to the marriage had to be given by the parents. Even with consent, parties were not allowed to be married unless the male was at least 14 years old and the female was at least 12.
- Marriage Act (1753) znany tez jako Lord Hardwicke's Marriage Act - ustawa parlamentu brytyjskiego z 1753 roku określająca minimalny wiek wymagany do tego by małżeństwo było legalne. Do jej pomysłodawców należał ówczesny premier Henry Pelham. Ustawa wymagała by chcący się pobrać mieli co najmniej 21 lat, jeśli byli młodsi wymagana była zgoda rodziców. Marriage Act wchodził w życie w 1754 roku. Nie obowiązywał jednak w takich rejonach jak Wyspy Normandzkie i Szkocja.
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- Marriage Act 1753
- Marriage Act (1753)
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