Wife Selling
From a comments thread over on Making Light comes this interesting article on the historical practice of wife selling. Apparently this was slightly less obnoxious than it sounds, and functioned as a means of adjusting unhappy marriages in an era where divorce was unavailable. And the ritual was entertaining, at least to readily-amused louts like me:
In Staffordshire, for example, the custom of wife selling followed a fairly rigid pattern. A man in search of freedom took his wife to market, with a length of rope attached to her neck. He paid a toll that gave him the right to sell merchandise, then paraded her around the market extolling her virtues. Interested males would then bid for her in a general auction. Once a bid was accepted the husband would hand over the toll ticket as proof of ownership, and the trio would then retire to the inn and seal the deal with a beer or two. Despite the lowly position of the wives in these transactions, most accepted the custom as a satisfactory way of ending an unhappy marriage. In many instances the sale was agreed by mutual consent before the auction commenced. However, it was accepted practice that the formality of the market place auction would always be conducted.
Shorter URL for sharing: https://www.erosblog.com/?p=693
Thomas Hardy wrote a novel in the 19th century called The Mayor of Casterbridge, where a drunken laborer sells his wife to a sailor. When he sobers up he repents his action, and goes on the wagon, and over the years rises to prominence as the richest man in town. Then the wife comes back. Its interesting to think that Hardy might have read some of these same local stories and formed the kernal of his plot.
Any mention of rentals?
Please make sure you return all wives fully rewound…
I wonder if they offered options to finance. Or how about leasing? Every two years you trade up for the newer model, as long as you don’t go over a certain number of miles.
All I can think is how awful it must have been for those that didn’t sell. Having to live with the knowledge that not only did your husband not want you, but no one else did either.
And guys wonder why women shy away from situations where they could be rejected!
[…] here at ErosBlog have been aware since 2004 of the historic British practice of holding public wife auctions. When I first posted about this […]