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HARDNESS AS A WORTH: CONTRIBUTION TO THE HISTORICAL ANTHROPOLOGY OF IMPOTENCE IN THE PRE–BOURGEOIS AGE

Dušan Kos


Puni tekst: slovenski pdf 136 Kb

str. 139-154

preuzimanja: 506

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Sažetak

This paper is devoted to the inter-relation between church law, Christian morals and
pastoral attitudes towards disturbances in (marital) sexual behaviour and their influence
on the social micro-environment. A study is made of rarely known cases from the
territory of the Ljubljana diocese (Carniola, Slovenia) up till 1783, when the regulation
of marital union in the Habsburg Monarchy was still absolutely in the domain of
the Church. Among all the extant documents, the most extensive are those relating to
the dissolution of the marriage of count and countess Ursini–Blagay in the years
1769–1771. Their difficulties reflect all the legal, medical and social characteristics of
pre-modern society, and therefore the case is analyzed in close detail. The successful
divorce of the Ursini–Blagays was a special instance, and was possible only because of
the wife’s more-than-average involvement in the legal-medical »proving« of her husband’s
incurable impotence. It was this which, in an otherwise indissoluble marriage,
essentially prevented consummation, the regular fulfilment of marital duty, procreation
and – as emerged in the legal proceedings – the enjoyment of love. A new moral in the
18th century (after shameless Baroque-period) was, indeed, inter twined with the more
intimate feelings and with »a new shame« in sexual practice.
With the new views on man as part of nature, and with the appearance of numerous
sexological, medical and legal works, sexuality was nevertheless still not accorded anygreater importance. Impotence by the 18th century had become a taboo. In the majority
of cases of sexual incapacity, formal divorce was almost impossible on account of the
difficulty of proving and diagnosing the condition, and because of the material dependence
of the healthy spouse upon the impotent one. The small number of court proceedings
also means that people devoted considerable care to premarital sexual control.
Particularly the nobility, who were well aware of the significance of blood ties as a warranty
for the inheritability of personal privilege. Most married couples preferred to reconcile
themselves to unfulfilment in marriage, particularly if it had emerged after the
wedding. Impotence and sterility, however, especially for the nobility, became even
more decisive in the 19th century, when, on account of demographic changes, the number
of births in the family was declining. Hence it is not surprising that it was then that
mostly the ancient noble lineages in Slovenia were dying out.

Ključne riječi

the nobility; sexuality; impotence; sterility; dissolving of marriages; law; medicine; everyday life

Hrčak ID:

101755

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/101755

Datum izdavanja:

15.12.2004.

Podaci na drugim jezicima: hrvatski slovenski

Posjeta: 1.295 *