And it was in this reliable old phaeton that I took her back to my home, strapping her and her sizeable dowry to the buckboard. |
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Parents start buying gold jewellery at the birth of a daughter in preparation for the dowry she will need on her wedding day. |
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The amount of the dowry is determined through negotiations between the families of the engaged. |
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The bride was given a dowry of three thousand livres in ready money, a third of it reserved for the couple's communal use. |
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When girls were going to get married their fathers had to give their future husband a dowry. |
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If he had a son, he would try to make good his loss by claiming a hefty dowry in his marriage. |
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He had no doubt that his father must have allotted a large amount of money to her for her dowry. |
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The Elector was broke and couldn't afford to pay the agreed dowry, but he wanted the money such a marriage would be sure to bring his way. |
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In the past, marriages were arranged and women brought a dowry to the marriage. |
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Olivia informs him that he cannot touch her dowry, that the money is for Joey and any other children they might have. |
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The bride brings a dowry to the marriage usually consisting of household goods and her own clothing. |
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Sanjiv and his parents had demanded Rs 50,000, household articles and clothes as dowry. |
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The cattle would have been used for a dowry so it is in ways like that she asserts herself as an independent woman. |
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The groom's folks were bound by custom to be even more critical of her appearance and her dowry than were the neighborhood women. |
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She wanted adequate safeguards against dowry, bigamy, adultery, and apostasy in the new legislation. |
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The Imams in our mosques give sermons on so many issues, but never touch upon this topic of dowry. |
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According to her husband's testament, the lady was returned her dowry and was given the usufruct of her husband's landed property. |
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Since she's naught but an orphan, lacking dowry and family, then you should be content with a handfast. |
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The village girls spit out the chaff as they winnow with wooden forks and sing about their dowry jewels. |
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Her crisp and succinct discussion of dowry is sure to remain the classic analysis of this subject. |
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The Egyptians, Phoenicians and Hittites practised it as a special ritual in conjunction with the presentation of the dowry. |
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Have we not been burning our women within the confines of our homes, young women who have not brought enough dowry? |
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It shall be no offence for you to divorce your wives before the marriage is consummated or the dowry is settled. |
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Personal enmity, property disputes, love intrigues, dowry and gain are the major reasons for murdering women. |
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It all began with curbs on open grazing and felling of trees, control on population growth and ban on dowry and alcoholism. |
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There are several reasons for the prevalence of the dowry system, but the main one is that it is a necessary precondition for marriage. |
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She brings out a suitcase full of intricately embroidered cloths that she is preparing for her daughter's dowry. |
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He is pained by every report of dowry death in newspapers wherever he is located and feels that his mission is incomplete. |
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They want to make a small fortune or just experience new things before their parents marry them off for a dowry somewhere in the remote countryside. |
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A society that does not shudder in shame to hear cases of sati, female infanticide and foeticide, and bride burning for dowry can hardly be expected to react to cases of rape. |
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The girl had been harassed for dowry by her in-laws since her marriage two years ago, but this year they had become particularly cruel towards her. |
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He claimed that all the others in his group were burned at the stake, but that he was saved and married by a sachem's widowed daughter, whose dowry included European scalps. |
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The groom has to give the bride a dowry to make the contract valid, and that dowry is for her and her alone to use as she wishes. |
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Girls are seen as a burden, as the family must pay a dowry to the men they eventually marry. |
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Once the dowry has been cashed, there is no financial reason to keep the wife around. |
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It is well recognised that in crimes such as rape, molestation, dowry deaths, kidnapping and so on, victims would be more forthcoming if questioned by women police. |
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On payment of a dowry, the man enjoys full marital rights, with no ongoing responsibility for any resultant children once the stated term expires. |
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However, Kalaimani, unshaven and unkempt, mourning the loss of his boats had to be convinced to forget the dowry amount and encouraged to go ahead with the wedding. |
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Families who want to marry off their daughters without paying a dowry often hire criminals to abduct eligible boys and force them into wedlock, the paper said. |
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Research on dowries in the Bolognese nobility shows that, although fathers' obligation to give a dowry to daughters had been abolished in 1865, the practice persisted. |
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The women are punished for refusing arranged marriages, or if their family fails to produce a promised dowry, or who in some way bring dishonour on their family. |
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In men's wills, usufruct on the husband's property is left to widows under condition that they give up their right to dowry and extradotal goods in favour of offspring. |
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The dowry may include livestock, money, or other socially valued items. |
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It was resolved to launch a national campaign for the abolition of both the caste system and dowry because together they tended to reinforce the system of caste endogamy. |
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Larger women often are favored as brides because they appear to come from a well-to-do family that can provide a significant dowry and seem strong enough to carry heavy loads. |
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The woman could not be less interested but the blackboard she gets for her dowry comes in handy as a rather ineffectual shelter against chemical weapons. |
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He was stripped of his inheritance, his wife's dowry, and his priesthood, but he refused to divorce Cornelia and was forced to go into hiding. |
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The assumption is that, the status, body and labour of women belong to men after the payment of lobola or roora or dowry. |
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Like other towns in northwestern Europe, London had partible inheritance, so daughters might receive additional property besides the dowry. |
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Girls store their dowry in carpet bags, and every day, the family prays on the prayer rug. |
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A dowry of 200,000 crowns had been agreed, and half was paid shortly after the marriage. |
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In the play, the young Mariana was to be married, but was rejected by her betrothed when her dowry was lost in a shipwreck. |
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The payment of dowry, although illegal, remains widespread across class lines. |
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Her family was wealthy and her dowry helped to pay for a share in the New Willey Company. |
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The death of Henry's eldest son, Henry the Young King, in June 1183, began a dispute over the dowry of Philip's widowed sister Margaret. |
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Philip insisted that the dowry should be returned to France as the marriage did not produce any children, per the betrothal agreement. |
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Fulk returned from the Levant and demanded that Henry return Matilda and her dowry, a range of estates and fortifications in Maine. |
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Attila claimed her as his bride and half the Western Roman Empire as dowry. |
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The customs of bride price and dowry that exist in many parts of the world can lead to buying and selling people into marriage. |
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In 1477 the Duchy of Brabant became part of the House of Habsburg as part of the dowry of Mary of Burgundy. |
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This movement questioned existing orthodoxies, particularly with respect to women, marriage, the dowry system, the caste system, and religion. |
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This bride-gift, a kind of reverse dowry, indicates that grooms had to compete for relatively few brides. |
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The dowry of the Orkney and Shetland Islands in 1468 was the last great land acquisition for the kingdom. |
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I consider these more as the privileges of age, than as part of the hymeneal dowry. |
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Attila claimed Honoria as his wife and half of the Western Empire's territory as his dowry. |
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Henry II had conquered Brittany and taken control of Gisors and the Vexin, which had been part of Margaret's dowry. |
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Her dowry, upon the agreement between the two kingdoms, was 600,000 crowns. |
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The Code of Manu also sanctioned dowry and bridewealth in ancient India, but dowry was the more prestigious form and associated with the Brahmanic caste. |
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Four hundred sesterces Gracchus gives as dowry to a horn-player. |
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Some social scientists attribute the increasing prevalence of dowry to the concept of groomhood being drastically changed from the normal eligible bachelor to a fancy product. |
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Women, mainly in northern and western India, often were restrained from property inheritance and dowry settlements, both of which the Sharia provides. |
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Similarly, although Matilda was granted a number of Normandy castles as part of her dowry, it was not specified when the couple would actually take possession of them. |
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Deaths resulting from dowry, mostly from bride burning, are on the rise. |
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Louis VII's daughter, Margaret, who was still a baby, was betrothed to Henry's heir, his eldest son, Henry the Young King with a dowry of the Norman Vexin. |
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In January 1193, Richard's brother, John, was summoned to Paris, where he did homage to Philip for all of Richard's lands, and promised to marry Alys with Artois as her dowry. |
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Part of Alys's dowry that had been given over to Richard during their engagement was the territory of Vexin, which included the strategic fortress of Gisors. |
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Their value is also evident in history when Antra Bin Shaddad, the historical poet and knight, presented the camels as dowry to his beloved, Abla. |
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Another potential source of income was the prospect of a Spanish dowry from a marriage between Charles, Prince of Wales, and Infanta Maria Anna of Spain. |
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In 1181, Philip began a war with Philip, Count of Flanders, over the Vermandois, which King Philip claimed as his wife's dowry and the Count was unwilling to give up. |
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