Page:The evolution of marriage and of the family ... (IA evolutionofmarri00letorich).pdf/66

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the cacique, or to a priest of high rank. Religion already begins to insinuate itself into this singular right.[1]

According to Marco Polo, the same custom existed in the thirteenth century in Cochin-China. "Know," says the old chronicler, "no woman can marry without the king first seeing her. If she pleases him, he takes her to wife; if she does not please him, he gives her enough from his own property to enable her to marry.

"In the year 1280 of Christ, when Messire Marco Polo was in that country, the king had three hundred and eighty-six children, male and female."[2]

Under the feudal system in Europe this right of prelibation, or marquette (designated in old French by the expressive term droit de culage), has been in use in many fiefs, and until a very recent epoch. Almost in our own days certain lords of the Netherlands, of Prussia, and of Germany, still claimed it. In a French title-deed of 1507 we read that the Count d'Eu has the right of prelibation in the said place when any one marries.[3] More than this, ecclesiastics, and even bishops, have been known to claim this right in their quality of feudal lords. "I have seen," says Boetius, "in the court at Bourges, before the metropolitan, an appeal by a certain parish priest, who pretended to claim the first night of young brides, according to the received usage. The demand was rejected with indignation, the custom unanimously proscribed, and the scandalous priest condemned to pay a fine."

"In a kingdom of Malabar," says J. Forbes, "the ecclesiastical power took precedence of the civil on this particular point, and the sovereign himself passed under the yoke. Like the other women, the queen had to submit to the right of prelibation exercised by the high priest, who had a right to the first three nights, and who was paid fifty pieces of gold besides for his trouble."[4] In Cambodia, according to an ancient Chinese traveller, religious prelibation was obligatory on all the young girls, and was performed every year with great ceremony. The parents who had daughters

  1. Bancroft, Native Races, etc., vol. i. p. 584.
  2. Marco Polo, Edition Populaire, p. 187.
  3. Laurière, Glose du droit Français, at the word Culage ou Culiage.
  4. James Forbes, Oriental Memoirs, vol. i. p. 446; vol. iv. 1813.