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E-raamat: Stepfamilies across Europe and Overseas, 1550-1900

Edited by , Edited by (Saint Mary's University, Canada)
  • Formaat: 236 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Feb-2024
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781003846819
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
  • Hind: 64,99 €*
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This book emphasizes diverse perspectives on the new and expanding history of stepfamilies in Europe and some of its overseas territories from 1550 to 1900.

The chapters examine the life stages within stepfamilies from the half-orphans and illegitimate children who experienced the introduction of a stepparent to how parent–child and step or half-sibling relationships shifted and changed with living arrangements and mobility within villages or to towns and overseas. Several historical demography chapters establish the frequency and types of stepfamilies in Western and East Central Europe – whether a father-stepmother couple, a mother-stepfather union, a parent with an illegitimate child. Other themes include the effect of parental loss on child survival; how a stepparent influenced a child’s wellbeing with caregiving and contributions to the household economy; emotional bonds through letters and gift-giving; step–relatives who marry their close kin; and how property and inheritance regimes shaped stepfamily patterns.

Stepfamilies across Europe and Overseas, 1550–1900 will appeal to researchers and students interested in the history of family, marriage, and society. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of The History of the Family.



This book emphasizes diverse perspectives on the new and expanding history of stepfamilies in Europe and some of its overseas territories from 1550 to 1900. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of The History of the Family.

Introduction: Stepfamilies across Europe and overseas, 15501900
1.
Influence of parental death on child mortality and the phenomenon of the
stepfamily in western Bohemia in 17081834
2. Parental loss in 18th19th
century Hungary: the impact of the parents widowhood and remarriage on their
childrens survival, Zsámbék, 17201850
3. Stepfamilies, inheritance, and
living arrangements in a rural society of Germany
4. Remarriage and
stepfamilies in the Western Islands of Europe: the rural Azores of Portugal
in the 18th and 19th centuries
5. The invisibility of Portuguese
stepfamilies: the relationships between stepparents, stepchildren and
half-siblings in eighteenth and nineteenthcentury Porto
6. Changing
patterns of hierarchy within Swedish stepfamilies in the late 1700s
7.
Stepmothers and stepdaughters in early modern Florence
8. Restrained freedom?
Widows, blended families and inheritance in eighteenth-century urban Sri
Lanka Epilogue: A visual approach to stepfamilies
Lyndan Warner is Full Professor in the Department of History at Saint Marys University in Halifax on the Atlantic coast of Canada. Her research spans the disciplines of the history of the family, law, and visual culture in the early modern period. She is Burghley Visiting Fellow at St Johns College, Cambridge in Michaelmas 2024.

Gabriella Erdélyi is Senior Research Fellow at the Research Centre for the Humanities (HUN-REN RCH), Institute of History, Budapest. Erdélyis Integrating Families, Hungarian Academy of Sciences Momentum project 2017-2022, explored stepfamily dynamics in East Central Europe. She is editor of the series Hungarian Family Histories: Studies and co-editor of the Hungarian Historical Review.