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{{Short description|Mating system in which the male partner may have multiple partners}} | |||
{{Multiple issues|refimprove=June 2006|cleanup=January 2007|original research=April 2009}} | |||
{{About|polygynous marriage practices|polygynous animal mating|Polygyny in animals}} | |||
{{Distinguish|Polygamy|Polyamory}} | |||
[[File:Legality of polygamy.svg|thumb|400px | |||
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{{legend|#56b4e9|Polygyny is legal}} | |||
{{legend|#0072b2|Polygyny is legal in certain regions (] only)}} | |||
{{legend|#009e73|Polygyny is legal for Muslims only}} | |||
{{legend|#d55e00|Polygyny is illegal, but the practice is not criminalized}} | |||
{{legend|#000000|Polygyny is illegal and the practice is criminalized | |||
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{{legend|#e0e0e0|Legal status unknown}} </div> | |||
{{Bulleted list |style=margin:0.5em 0.5em 0.25em;border-top:1px solid#aaa;font-size:94%; |item_style=line-height:1.3em; | |||
| In ], ], the ], ], ], and ] polygyny is legal only for ]s. | |||
| In ] and ], polygynous marriages based on customary law are legally recognized for Muslims. | |||
| In ], polygynous unions have no legal recognition. However, Muslim men may marry up to four women, but they do not have the legal status of wives. | |||
}} ]] | |||
] and four of his wives]] | |||
'''Polygyny''' ({{IPAc-en|p|ə|ˈ|l|ɪ|dʒ|ɪ|n|i}}) is a form of ] entailing the marriage of a man to several women. The term polygyny is from ] πολυγυνία ({{grc-transl|πολυγυνία}}); {{etymology|grc|''{{wikt-lang|grc|πολύ}}'' ({{grc-transl|πολύ}})|many||''{{wikt-lang|grc|γυνή}}'' ({{grc-transl|γυνή}})|woman, wife}}.<ref>'']'', Liddell & Scott, ] γυνή</ref> | |||
==Incidence== | |||
Polygyny is more widespread in ] than in any other ].<ref>Clignet, R., ''Many Wives, Many Powers'', Northwestern University Press, Evanston (1970), p. 17.</ref> Some scholars theorize that the ]'s impact on the male-to-female sex ratio was a key factor in the emergence and fortification of polygynous practices in regions of Africa.<ref name="dalton" /> | |||
Polygyny is most common in a region known as the "polygamy belt" in ] and ], with the countries estimated to have the highest polygamy prevalence in the world being ], ], ], ] and ].<ref name="pewresearch.org">{{cite web |last1=Kramer |first1=Stephanie |title=Polygamy is rare around the world and mostly confined to a few regions |url=https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2020/12/07/polygamy-is-rare-around-the-world-and-mostly-confined-to-a-few-regions/ |website=Pew Research Center |date=December 7, 2020}}</ref> In the region of ], polygyny is common and deeply rooted in the culture, with 11 percent of the population of sub-Saharan Africa living in such marriages (25 percent of the Muslim population and 3 percent of the Christian population, as of 2019).<ref name="pewresearch.org"/> Polygyny is especially widespread in West Africa, with the countries estimated to have the highest polygyny prevalence in the world as of 2019 being Burkina Faso (36%), Mali (34%) and Gambia (30%).<ref name="pewresearch.org"/> Outside of Africa, the highest prevalence is in ], ] and ]. | |||
<ref name="pewresearch.org"/> | |||
Historically, polygyny was partly accepted in ancient ] society, in ], and in sporadic traditional Native American, ]n and ]n cultures. In the ], it was known to have been practiced during ancient times.{{Citation needed|date=July 2024|reason=polygyny is legal today in Bangladesh for Hindus as well as muslims. In Pakistan and India it is legal for muslim men to have upto four wives with certain conditions }} It was accepted in ], until the ] and the ]. {{Citation needed|date=October 2023}} | |||
In ], polygyny is practiced by some Mormon sects, such as the ] (FLDS Church).<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://archive.sltrib.com/printfriendly.php?id=2925222&itype=NGPSID | title=LDS splinter groups growing | the Salt Lake Tribune}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news | url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-40709250 | title=Canadian polygamists found guilty| work=BBC News| date=2017-07-25}}</ref> | |||
Polygyny is more common in societies that have the custom of ].<ref name=Oxford2007>''The Oxford Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology'', Edited by Robin Dunbar and Louise Barret (2007). Oxford University Press, Chapter 26, "The evolutionary ecology of family size".</ref> | |||
Some studies of ] have shown that there have been more mothers than fathers in the genetic record of the human species, meaning that the proportion of females that have reproduced in each generation has generally been greater than the proportion of men that reproduced. The authors of one 2014 study attributed these findings to widespread polygyny.<ref name=MoreMothers>{{cite web |last1=Geggel |first1=Laura |title=Humanity Has More Mothers Than Fathers, DNA Reveals |url=https://www.livescience.com/47976-more-mothers-in-human-history.html |website=livescience.com |access-date=1 March 2023 |language=en |date=24 September 2014}}</ref> | |||
==Cause and explanation== | |||
===Augmenting division of labor=== | |||
] was the first to propose that the high incidence of polygyny in sub-Saharan Africa is rooted in the sexual division of labor in ] and the large economic contribution of women.<ref name="goody" />{{sfn|Boserup|1970}} | |||
{{Anthropology of kinship}} | |||
In some regions of shifting cultivation where polygyny is most frequently recorded, labor is often starkly divided between genders. In many of these cases, the task of felling trees in preparation of new plots, the fencing of fields against wild animals, and sometimes the planting of crops, is usually done by men and older boys (along with hunting, fishing and the raising of livestock).<ref name="FB 1969">Guyer, Jane. (1991). "Female Farming in Anthropology and African History". ''Gender at the Crossroads of Knowledge: Feminist Anthropology in the postmodern Era''. Berkeley and Los Angeles, California: University of California Press. pp. 260-261.</ref><ref name="Cornwall2005">{{cite book|author=Andrea Cornwall|title=Readings in Gender in Africa|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=INci71MNlhQC&pg=PA103|date=2005|publisher=Indiana University Press|isbn=978-0-253-34517-2|pages=103–110}}</ref> Wives, on the other hand, are responsible for other aspects of cultivating, food processing and providing meals and for performing domestic duties for the family. Boserup notes that though the work completed by women calculates for a larger percentage of the tasks that form the basis of sub-Saharan life, women often do not receive the majority portion of the benefits that accompany economic and agricultural success. | |||
{{Legal recognition of polygamy}} | |||
{{Close relationships}} | {{Close relationships}} | ||
An elderly cultivator, with several wives and likely several young male children, benefits from having a much larger workforce within his household. By the combined efforts of his young sons and young wives, he may gradually expand his cultivation and become more prosperous. A man with a single wife has less help in cultivation and is likely to have little or no help for felling trees. According to Boserup's historical data, women living in such a structure also welcome one or more co-wives to share with them the burden of daily labor. However, the second wife will usually do the most tiresome work, almost as if she were a servant to the first wife, and will be inferior to the first wife in status.{{sfn|Boserup|1970|pp=41–47}} A 1930s study of the ] in the West African state of Sierra Leone concluded that a plurality of wives is an agricultural asset, since a large number of women makes it unnecessary to employ wage laborers.{{sfn|Little|1967}} Polygyny is considered an economic advantage in many rural areas. In some cases, the economic role of the additional wife enables the husband to enjoy more leisure.{{sfn|Boserup|1970|pp=40–41}} | |||
'''Polygyny''' (from neo-]: ] ''poly'' - "many", and ] ''gyny'' - "woman or wife")<ref>''Greek-English Lexicon'', Liddell & Scott, s.v. γυνή</ref> is a form of marriage in which a man has two or more wives at the same time.<ref>''Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged'', s.v. 'polygyny'.</ref> In countries where the practice is illegal, the man is referred to as a ] or a polygamist. It is distinguished from relationships where a man has a sexual partner outside marriage, such as a ], casual sexual partner, ], cohabitates with a married woman or other culturally but not legally recognized secondary partner. Polygyny is the most common form of ]; the much rarer practice of ] is the form of marriage in which one woman has two or more husbands at the same time.<ref>''Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged'', s.v. ‘polyandry’.</ref> | |||
Anthropologist ]'s comparative study of marriage around the world, using the ], demonstrated a historical correlation between the practice of extensive ] and polygyny in many Sub-Saharan African societies.<ref name=goody>{{cite book|last=Goody|first=Jack|title=Production and Reproduction: A Comparative Study of the Domestic Domain|date=1976|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge|pages=27–29}}</ref> Drawing on the work of ], Goody notes that in some of the sparsely-populated regions where shifting cultivation takes place in Africa, much of the work is done by women. This favored polygynous marriages, in which men sought to monopolize the production of women "who are valued both as workers and as child bearers." | |||
==History== | |||
Polygyny has been practiced in some cultures throughout history. It was partially accepted in ancient ] society, in classical ], and in sporadic traditional Native American, ]n and ]n cultures. In ] it was known to have been practiced during ancient times. It was accepted in ancient ], until the ] and the ] when having one wife, but multiple lovers became the norm. It was accepted in Sub-Saharan Africa for most of the past two millennia. | |||
Goody, however, observes that the correlation is imperfect, and also describes more traditionally male-dominated though relatively extensive farming systems, such as those common in much of West Africa, particularly the ] region, where more agricultural work is done by men, and polygamy is desired more for the production of male offspring whose labor in farming is valued.<ref>Goody, Jack. ''Polygyny, Economy and the Role of Women. In The Character of Kinship''. London: Cambridge University Press, 1973, p. 180–190.</ref> | |||
In the Hebrew Bible, polygyny was a permitted practice (and required in the case of a ]) whilst polyandry (a woman having more than one husband) was seen as adultery. | |||
Goody's observation regarding African male farming systems is discussed and supported by anthropologists Douglas R. White and Michael L. Burton in their article, "Causes of Polygyny: Ecology, Economy, Kinship, and Warfare",<ref name="white 1988">{{cite journal | last1=White | first1=Douglas | last2=Burton | first2=Michael | date=1988 | title=Causes of Polygyny: Ecology, Economy, Kinship, and Warfare |url= https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0468q4xq | journal=American Anthropologist | volume=90| issue=4| pages=871–887 | doi=10.1525/aa.1988.90.4.02a00060}}</ref>{{rp|884}} where the authors note: "Goody (1973) argues against the female contributions hypothesis. He notes Dorjahn's (1959) comparison of East and | |||
In the ], polygyny or "]" was allowed in the early history of ] (Mormon—LDS) Church.{{Citation needed|date=February 2009}} It ended in 1890 under the president of the LDS Church at the time, ].{{Citation needed|date=February 2009}} Officially since 1899, members of the LDS Church faced excommunication for being polygynous. There are several sects who separated themselves from LDS Church, and who have no ties nor relationship to the LDS Church that continue to practice polygyny despite polygynous ] being illegal in the United States.{{Citation needed|date=February 2009}} | |||
West Africa, showing higher female agricultural contributions in East Africa and higher polygyny rates in West Africa, especially in the West African savanna, where one finds especially high male agricultural contributions. Goody says, "The reasons behind polygyny are sexual and reproductive rather than economic and productive" (1973:189), arguing that men marry polygynously to maximize their fertility and to obtain large households containing many young dependent males."<ref name="white 1988" />{{rp|873}}<ref name="White2">{{cite journal | vauthors=White DR, Burton ML, Dow MM| title=Sexual Division of Labor in African Agriculture: A Network Autocorrelation Analysis | journal = American Anthropologist | volume=83 | issue=4 | pages=824–849 | date=December 1981 | doi=10.1525/aa.1981.83.4.02a00040 | url= https://www.researchgate.net/publication/227632381 | doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
In historical China a child was considered to have more than one mother.{{Citation needed|date=June 2007}} For example, a child might have up to four mothers, the first wife being the "official mother" (嫡母 dímǔ) – in spoken language called "big mother" (大媽 dàmā) – the others being regarded as unofficial mothers (庶母 shùmǔ), in spoken language called "little mother" (小媽 xiǎomā) or "aunt" (阿姨 āyí, 姨娘 yíniáng). However, this custom was primarily a result of the concubinage system, where only the first wife by marriage was considered the wife and the mistress of the household. A concubine did not marry her owner. Her main duty was to provide a son to her owner, and any children from the liaison were not regarded as officially hers. But she was also brought into the household to provide sexual pleasure to the man and servitude to his wife. | |||
An analysis by James Fenske (2012) found that child mortality and ecologically-related economic shocks had a stronger association with rates of polygamy in Sub-Saharan Africa rather than female agricultural contributions (which are typically relatively small in the West African savanna and Sahel, where polygyny rates are higher), finding that polygyny rates decrease significantly in line with child mortality rates.<ref>{{Citation | last=Fenske | first=James | title=African Polygamy: Past and Present |url= https://www.economics.ox.ac.uk/materials/papers/12544/csae-wps-2012-20.pdf | publisher=Centre for the Study of African Economies, University of Oxford | pages=1–30 | date=November 2012 | access-date=2019-09-27 | archive-date=2017-09-22 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20170922005828/https://www.economics.ox.ac.uk/materials/papers/12544/csae-wps-2012-20.pdf }}</ref> | |||
In polygynous marriages generally, usually one wife is the “queen wife” who is accorded a higher status than the other wives and has some authority over the other wives.<ref>] (1995) ''The ]: Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature'', Penguin Books, ISBN 0-14-024548-0.</ref> | |||
=== |
===Desire for progeny=== | ||
Most research into the determinants of polygyny has focused on macro-level factors. Widespread polygyny is linked to the kinship groups that share descent from a common ancestor.<ref name="Timeas 1998">Timeas, Ian and Reyner, Angela. "". ''Population Studies'' 52:2 (1998)</ref> Polygyny also served as "a dynamic principle of family survival, growth, security, continuity, and prestige", especially as a socially approved mechanism that increases the number of adult workers immediately and the eventual workforce of resident children.<ref name="Gwako, Edwins Laban 1998"/> | |||
According to scientific studies, the human mating system is considered to be moderately polygynandrous (multiple males and multiple females، all mate with each other), based both on surveys of world populations,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Low |first1=Bobbi S. |title=Measures of Polygyny in Humans |journal=Current Anthropology |date=February 1988 |volume=29 |issue=1 |pages=189–194 |doi=10.1086/203627 |s2cid=143665535 |url=https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/203627}}</ref><ref>Murdock G. P. (1981) Atlas of World Cultures. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: University of Pittsburgh Press</ref> and on characteristics of human reproductive physiology.<ref>Anderson, M. J.; Dixson, A. F. (2002). "Sperm competition: motility and the midpiece in primates". ''Nature'' 416: 496</ref><ref>Dixson, A. L.; Anderson, M. J. (2002). "Sexual selection, seminal coagulation and copulatory plug formation in primates". ''Folia Primatol'' 73: 63–69.</ref><ref>Harcourt, A. H.; Harvey, P. H.; Larson, S. G.; Short, R.V. (1981). "Testis weight, body weight and breeding system in primates". ''Nature'' 293: 55–57</ref> | |||
There is also some research that show that males living in polygynous marriages live longer; 12 percent longer on average. This would decrease the already unbalanced male/female balance.<ref>http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn14564</ref> | |||
===Economic burden=== | |||
Women have been more likely than men to be left unmarried or widowed. One current viable reason is that throughout human history males have always had a higher mortality rate. Polygyny ensured that such women were cared for and also helped ensure the births of the large numbers of children required for the survival of pre-mechanized, largely-agrarian cultures in which early mortality rates were high.{{Citation needed|date=June 2007}} | |||
Scholars have argued that in farming systems where men do most of the agriculture work, a second wife can be an economic burden rather than an asset. In order to feed an additional wife, the husband must either work harder himself or he must hire laborers to do part of the work. In such regions, polygyny is either non-existent or is a luxury which only a small minority of rich farmers can indulge.{{sfn|Boserup|1970|pp=47–48}} | |||
A report by the secretariat of the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) quotes: "one of the strongest appeals of polygyny to men in Africa is precisely its economic aspect, for a man with several wives commands more land, can produce more food for his household and can achieve a high status due to the wealth which he can command".{{sfn|Boserup|1970|p=37}} In Boserup's 1970 discussion of earlier analyses of polygynous systems, for example that of Little's work of the 1930s,{{sfn|Little|1967}} that through the hard work, economic, and agricultural assistance of a man's several wives, a husband could afford to pay the bride price of a new wife and further his access to more land, meanwhile increasing his progeny.{{sfn|Boserup|1970|pp=37–40}} According to Boserup, writing in 1970, tribal rules of land tenure were still in force over much of the continent of Africa.{{sfn|Boserup|1970|p=37}} In this system, members of a tribe which commands a certain territory had a native right to take land under cultivation for food production, and in many cases, also for the cultivation of cash crops. Under this tenure system, an additional wife is an economic asset that helps the family to expand its production. | |||
The required inheritance of widows requires men in some societies to marry the widow of a deceased brother. This ] helps provide support for her and increases his number of wives. | |||
The economist ] concludes that countries that practice polygyny are less economically stable than those that practice ]. Polygynous countries usually have a higher fertility rate, fewer savings reserves, and a lower GDP. A 2014 study estimates that fertility would decrease by 40 percent, savings would increase by 70 percent and GDP would increase by 170 percent if polygyny were banned.<ref name="dalton">{{Cite journal|last1=Dalton|first1=John|last2=Leung|first2=Tin Cheuk|date=2014|title=Why Is Polygyny More Prevalent in Western Africa? An African Slave Trade Perspective|url=http://users.wfu.edu/daltonjt/PolygynySlaveTrade.pdf|journal=Economic Development and Cultural Change|volume=62|issue=4|pages=601–604|via=Business Source Complete|doi=10.1086/676531|ssrn=1848183|s2cid=224797897}}</ref> Monogamous societies present a surge in economic productivity because monogamous men are able to save and invest their resources due to having fewer children. Polygynous societies have a higher concentration of men investing into methods of mating with women, whereas monogamous men invest more into their families and other related institutions.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Porter|first=Jonathan|date=2015|title=L'amour for four: polygyny, polyamory, and the state's compelling economic interest in normative monogamy|url=http://law.emory.edu/elj/_documents/volumes/64/6/porter.pdf|journal=Emory Law Journal|volume=64|page=2121}}</ref> | |||
In some societies only well-to-do men could afford to have more than one wife, particularly if each wife required maintenance of a separate household. The current traditional form of Islam permits as many as four wives, but depending on the man's financial circumstances, fewer wives are more common; indeed, the vast majority of Muslim men are monogamous. | |||
Despite the expenses of polygynous marriages, a 1995 study suggests that men benefit from marrying multiple wives through the economic and social insurance that ] ties produce. With a large network of in-laws, these men have the ties they need to compensate for other economic shortages.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Jacoby|first=Hanan|date=1995|title=The Economics of Polygyny in Sub-Saharan Africa: Female Productivity and the Demand for Wives in Côte d'Ivoire|journal=Journal of Political Economy|volume=103|issue=5|pages=942–943|doi=10.1086/262009|s2cid=153376774}}</ref> | |||
While few present-day states permit polygamous marriages, polygynous male behavior may be observed in the establishment of ], who are openly or secretly supported. In this way, men may be technically monogamous but ''de facto'' polygynous. | |||
===Libido=== | |||
Economically, polygyny tends to benefit all but the most desirable women, by giving them more opportunities to marry rich men, who are in short supply. Most men tend to be disadvantaged by polygyny, however, since when many women are able to marry a rich man, it leaves fewer women available for the less rich.<ref>http://www.psychologytoday.com/articles/200706/ten-politically-incorrect-truths-about-human-nature?page=2</ref> | |||
Some analysts have posited that a high ] may be a factor in polygyny,<ref>{{cite book|last1=Kammeyer|first1=Kenneth|title=Confronting the issues: Sex roles, marriage, and the family|url=https://archive.org/details/confrontingissue00kamm|date=1975|page=|publisher=Allyn and Bacon |isbn=978-0-205-04813-7}}</ref> although others have downplayed its significance.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Baber|first1=Ray|title=Marriage and the Family|date=1939|page=38}}</ref> The sex drive as a factor in some Asian cultures was sometimes associated with wealthy men and those that were adjunct to an aristocracy,<ref>{{cite book|last1=Thomas|first1=Paul|title=Indian Women Through the Ages: A Historical Survey of the Position of Women and the Institutions of Marriage and Family in India from Remote Antiquity to the Present Day. P. Thomas|date=1964|page=206}}</ref> although such libidinal perceptions were at times discarded in favor of seeing polygyny as a factor of traditional life.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Dardess|first1=George|title=Meeting Islam: A Guide for Christians|url=https://archive.org/details/meetingislamguid0000dard|url-access=registration|date=2005|page=|publisher=Paraclete Press |isbn=978-1-55725-433-7}}</ref> For example, many sub-Saharan African societies view polygyny as essential to expand their progeny and kinship, a practice of high cultural importance. In this case, it would be hard to determine whether the origin was that of high libido, as polygyny would be practiced regardless. Other explanations postulate that polygyny is a tool used to ward off inclinations towards infidelity.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Balon|first1=R|title=Is Infidelity Biologically Determined?|journal=European Psychiatry|volume=30|date=2015|page=72|doi=10.1016/S0924-9338(15)30061-4|s2cid=141975947}}</ref> In a chapter comparing Sub-Saharan African polygyny, Boserup (1970) comments that in regions where polygyny is practiced, but for demographic and economic reasons must to be delayed for males until older ages, higher incidences of adultery and prostitution are expected to be present.{{sfn|Boserup|1970|p=44}} | |||
== |
===Enslavement of women=== | ||
Researchers have suggested that ] may have originally started sailing and raiding due to a need to seek out women from foreign lands.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Hrala |first1=Josh |title=Vikings Might Have Started Raiding Because There Was a Shortage of Single Women |url=https://www.sciencealert.com/vikings-might-have-raided-because-there-was-a-shortage-of-single-women |work=ScienceAlert |date=18 November 2016 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Choi |first1=Charles Q. |title=The Real Reason for Viking Raids: Shortage of Eligible Women? |url=https://www.livescience.com/56786-vikings-raided-to-find-love.html |work=Live Science |date=8 November 2016 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://allthatsinteresting.com/iceland-founded-viking-slaves|title=Sex Slaves – The Dirty Secret Behind The Founding Of Iceland|date=2018-01-16|website=All That's Interesting|language=en-US|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190722043846/https://allthatsinteresting.com/iceland-founded-viking-slaves|archive-date=22 July 2019|access-date=2019-07-22}}</ref><ref name=":01">{{Cite web|url=https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2015/12/151228-vikings-slaves-thralls-norse-scandinavia-archaeology/|title=Kinder, Gentler Vikings? Not According to Their Slaves|date=2015-12-28|website=National Geographic News|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190802035726/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2015/12/151228-vikings-slaves-thralls-norse-scandinavia-archaeology/|archive-date=2 August 2019|access-date=2019-08-02}}</ref> The concept was expressed in the 11th century by historian ] in his semi-imaginary ''History of The Normans''.<ref name="Wyatt2009">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RWJGynaKSkkC&pg=PA124|title=Slaves and Warriors in Medieval Britain and Ireland: 800–1200|author=David R. Wyatt|publisher=Brill|date=2009|isbn=978-90-04-17533-4|page=124}}</ref> Rich and powerful Viking men tended to have many wives and concubines, and these polygynous relationships might have led to a shortage of eligible women for the average Viking male. Due to this, the average Viking man could have been forced to perform riskier actions to gain wealth and power to be able to find suitable women.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Viegas |first1=Jennifer |title=Viking Age triggered by shortage of wives? |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna26755692 |work=NBC News |date=17 September 2008 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Knapton |first1=Sarah |title=Viking raiders were only trying to win their future wives' hearts |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/11/05/viking-raiders-were-only-trying-to-win-their-future-wives-hearts/ |work=The Telegraph |date=5 November 2016 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.thevintagenews.com/2018/10/22/vikings-invasions/|title=New Viking Study Points to "Love and Marriage" as the Main Reason for their Raids|date=2018-10-22|website=The Vintage News|language=en|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190802035734/https://www.thevintagenews.com/2018/10/22/vikings-invasions/|archive-date=2 August 2019|access-date=2019-08-02}}</ref> Viking men would often buy or capture women and make them into their wives or concubines.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Karras|first=Ruth Mazo|date=1990|journal=Scandinavian Studies|volume=62|issue=2|pages=141–162 |jstor=40919117|title=Concubinage and Slavery in the Viking Age}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Poser|first=Charles M.|date=1994|title=The dissemination of multiple sclerosis: A Viking saga? A historical essay|journal=Annals of Neurology|language=en|volume=36|issue=S2|pages=S231–S243|doi=10.1002/ana.410360810|pmid=7998792|s2cid=36410898 }}</ref> The ] states that in 821 the Vikings plundered an Irish village and "carried off a great number of women into captivity".<ref name="DolfiniCrellin2018">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8e1lDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA349|title=Prehistoric Warfare and Violence: Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches|author1=Andrea Dolfini|author2=Rachel J. Crellin|author3=Christian Horn|author4=Marion Uckelmann|publisher=Springer|date=2018|isbn=978-3-319-78828-9|page=349}}</ref> | |||
====The Hebrew Bible==== | |||
The ] indicates that polygyny was practised in ancient ] societies. Though the institution was not extremely common, it was not particularly unusual and was certainly not prohibited but discouraged by the Bible (namely Moses Law recommended that kings should not have many wives, and when Solomon took 1000 wives the Bible cites his polygamy as the reason of the fall of his faith). The Bible mentions approximately forty polygynists, including ], ], ], ] and ], with little or no further remark on the institution. | |||
Polygyny in West Africa, the region of the world where the practice is most common, exists in a societal context where historical factors, such as the slave trade, and the local religion, Islam, interact creating a culture where polygyny is widespread. The slave trade's impact on the male-to-female sex ratio has been cited as a key factor in the high prevalence of polygynous practices in this region of Africa.<ref name="dalton" /> | |||
The ], the ], includes specific regulations on the practice of polygyny. {{Bibleverse||Exodus|21:10|NIV}} states that multiple marriages are not to diminish the status of the first wife, while {{bibleverse||Deuteronomy|21:15-17|NIV}} states that a man must award the inheritance due to a ] to the son who was actually born first, even if he hates that son's mother and likes another wife more (implying that he had divorced the first-born son's mother); and {{bibleverse||Deuteronomy|17:17|NIV}} states that the king shall not have too many wives.<ref> from ].</ref><ref>The king's behavior is condemned by Prophet Samuel in {{bibleverse|1|Samuel|8}}.</ref> | |||
==Findings== | |||
The biblical institution of a ] was a form of polygyny. {{bibleverse||Deuteronomy|25:5-10|NIV}} required a man to marry and support his deceased brother's ], if he died without her having given birth to a son. The practice has been justified in that it was important for the deceased brother to have an heir to inherit his lands, and to say the prayers for the dead for him. The practice was also a means to ensure that the widow was provided for. If the eldest brother refused to marry the widow then it was the responsibility of the next brother and so on down the family line. | |||
{{See also|List of sovereign states by sex ratio}} | |||
Of the 1,231 societies listed in the 1980 Ethnographic Atlas, 186 were found to be monogamous; 453 had occasional polygyny; 588 had more frequent polygyny; and 4 had polyandry.<ref name="Atlas"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121118232413/http://eclectic.ss.uci.edu/~drwhite/worldcul/Codebook4EthnoAtlas.pdf |date=2012-11-18 }} derived from George P. Murdock's ''Ethnographic Atlas'' recording the marital composition of 1,231 societies from 1960 to 1980.</ref> Some research has shown that males living in polygynous marriages may live 12 percent longer.<ref>, ''New Scientist'', 19 August 2008</ref> Polygyny may be practiced where there is a lower male:female ratio; this may result from male infants having increased mortality from infectious diseases.<ref>{{Cite journal | last1=Nettle | first1=D. | title=Ecological influences on human behavioural diversity: A review of recent findings |doi= 10.1016/j.tree.2009.05.013 | journal =Trends in Ecology & Evolution |volume= 24| issue=11 | pages= 618–624| date= 2009| pmid= 19683831}}</ref> However, the natural ] at birth is actually slightly biased in favour of males (the natural sex ratio is around 105 boys/100 girls at birth; generally in the range of 103–107);<ref>{{Cite journal|url=https://ourworldindata.org/gender-ratio#sex-ratio-at-birth|title = Gender Ratio|journal = Our World in Data|date = 13 June 2019|last1 = Ritchie|first1 = Hannah|author1-link = Hannah Ritchie }}</ref> presently in some countries this is even more biased in favor of males due to ] and ]. | |||
===In Judaism=== | |||
Since the 11th century, ] Jews have followed ]'s ban on polygyny (except in rare circumstances).<ref>.</ref> | |||
===Violence=== | |||
Some ] Jewish communities (particularly ] and ]) discontinued polygyny much more recently, as they immigrated to countries where it was forbidden or illegal. Such is the case in the ], which has made polygamy illegal.<ref>''Penal Law Amendment (Bigamy) Law'', 5719-1959.</ref><ref> by P Shifman.</ref> In practice, however, the law is only loosely enforced, primarily so as not to interfere with ] culture, where polygyny is practiced.<ref>.</ref> Pre-existing polygynous unions among ] (or other countries where the practice was not prohibited by their tradition and was not illegal in the local law) are also not subject to this Israeli law, although a similar cultural concession to the Bedouin is not extended to Mizrahi Jews, and they are not permitted to enter into new polygamous marriages in Israel. | |||
Research shows that polygyny is widely practiced in countries that are destabilized, more violent, more likely to invade neighbors and more likely to ].<ref name="ec" >{{cite news|title=The perils of polygamy: The link between polygamy and war |url=https://www.economist.com/news/christmas-specials/21732695-plural-marriage-bred-inequality-begets-violence-link-between-polygamy-and-war |access-date=22 December 2017|newspaper=] |date=19 December 2017}}</ref> This has been attributed to the inequality factor of polygyny, where if the richest and most powerful 10 percent of males have four wives each, the bottom thirty percent of males cannot marry. In the top twenty countries in the 2017 ], polygyny is widely practiced.<ref name="ec" /> In ], more than one-third of women are married to a man who has more than one wife, and a study of 240,000 children in 29 African countries has also shown that, after controlling for other factors, children in polygynous families were more likely to die young.<ref name="ec" /> A 2019 study of 800 rural African ethnic groups published in the '']'' found that "young men who belong to polygynous groups feel that they are treated more unequally and are readier to use violence in comparison to those belonging to monogamous groups."<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Koos|first1=Carlo|last2=Neupert-Wentz|first2=Clara|title=Polygynous Neighbors, Excess Men, and Intergroup Conflict in Rural Africa|journal=]|publisher=]|date=July 23, 2019|volume=64|issue=2–3|pages=402–431|doi=10.1177/0022002719859636 |doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
Among ], who do not adhere to Rabbinic interpretations of the Torah, polygyny is non-existent today. Karaites interpret {{bibleverse||Leviticus|18:18|HE}} to mean that a man can only take a second wife if his first wife gives her consent<ref>Keter Torah on Leviticus, pp.96—97.</ref> and Karaites interpret {{bibleverse||Exodus|21:10|HE}} to mean that a man can only take a second wife if he is capable of maintaining the same level of marital duties due to his first wife: namely, food, clothing, and sexual gratification. | |||
In a 2011 doctoral thesis, anthropologist Kyle R. Gibson reviewed three studies documenting 1,208 suicide attacks from 1981 to 2007 and found that countries with higher polygyny rates correlated with greater production of ].<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Harmon|first1=Vanessa|first2=Edin|last2=Mujkic|first3=Catherine|last3=Kaukinen|first4=Henriikka|last4=Weir|title=Causes & Explanations of Suicide Terrorism: A Systematic Review|date=2018|journal=Homeland Security Affairs|publisher=]|volume=25|url=https://www.hsaj.org/articles/14749}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Gibson|first=Kyle R.|title=The Roles of Operational Sex Ratio and Young-Old Ratio in Producing Suicide Attackers|date=2011|publisher=]|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/260059007}}</ref> Political scientist ] has found that among ], 97 percent were unmarried and 84 percent were male (or if excluding the ], 91 percent male),<ref>{{cite journal|last=Pape|first=Robert|author-link=Robert Pape|title=The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism|date=2003|journal=]|publisher=]|volume=97|issue=3|pages=343–361|doi=10.1017/S000305540300073X|doi-broken-date=1 November 2024 |hdl=1811/31746|s2cid=1019730|url=http://www.columbia.edu/itc/journalism/stille/Politics%20Fall%202007/readings%20weeks%206-7/Strategic%20Logic%20of%20Suicide%20Missions.pdf|hdl-access=free}}</ref> while a study conducted by the ] in ] in 2008 found that suicide bombers were almost always single men without children aged 18 to 30 (with a mean age of 22), and were typically students or employed in ].<ref>{{cite news|title=U.S. study draws portrait of Iraq bombers|date=March 15, 2008|work=]|publisher=]|url=https://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/world/iraq/2008-03-15-iraq-study_N.htm|access-date=February 27, 2020}}</ref> In addition to noting that countries where polygyny is widely practiced tend to have higher ] and ], political scientists ] and Bradley Thayer have argued that because ], the higher degrees of marital inequality in ] than most of the world causes them to have larger populations susceptible to suicide terrorism, and that ] for ] serves as a mechanism to mitigate ] conflict within Islamic countries between ] by bringing esteem to the latter's families and redirecting their violence towards out-groups.<ref name="Hudson & Thayer 2010">{{cite journal|last1=Hudson|first1=Valerie M.|author-link1=Valerie M. Hudson|last2=Thayer|first2=Bradley|title=Sex and the Shaheed: Insights from the Life Sciences on Islamic Suicide Terrorism|date=2010|journal=]|publisher=]|volume=34|issue=4|pages=48–53|jstor=40784561}}</ref> | |||
Because of these two biblical limitations and because nearly all western countries outlaw it, polygyny is considered impractical, and there are no known cases of it among Karaite Jews. | |||
Along with his research on the ], anthropologist ] found that ] terrorist groups (such as ]) provide monthly ]s, ], and massive prestige to the families of suicide terrorists.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Atran|first=Scott|author-link=Scott Atran|date=2003|title=Genesis of Suicide Terrorism|journal=]|publisher=]|volume=299|issue=5612|pages=1534–1539|doi=10.1126/science.1078854|pmid=12624256 |bibcode=2003Sci...299.1534A |s2cid=12114032 |url=https://jeannicod.ccsd.cnrs.fr/ijn_00509568/file/genesis_of_Suicide_terrorism.pdf }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Atran|first=Scott|date=2006|title=The moral logic and growth of suicide terrorism|journal=]|publisher=]|volume=29|issue=2|pages=127–147|doi=10.1162/wash.2006.29.2.127|s2cid=154382700 |url=https://jeannicod.ccsd.cnrs.fr/ijn_00000676/file/TWQ06spring_atran.pdf }}</ref> Citing Atran and other anthropological research showing that 99 percent of Palestinian suicide terrorists are male, that 86 percent are unmarried, and that 81 percent have at least six siblings (larger than the average Palestinian family size), cognitive scientist ] argues in '']'' (2011) that because the families of men in the ] and ] often cannot afford ]s and that many potential brides end up in polygynous marriages, the financial compensation of an act of suicide terrorism can buy enough brides for a man's brothers to have children to make the ] pay off in terms of ] and ] (with Pinker also citing a famous quotation attributed to evolutionary biologist ] when Haldane quipped that he would not sacrifice his life for his brother but would for "two brothers or eight cousins").<ref>{{cite book|last=Pinker|first=Steven|author-link=Steven Pinker|date=2011|title=The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined|title-link=The Better Angels of Our Nature|publisher=]|place=New York|pages=353–358|isbn=978-0-14-312201-2}}</ref> | |||
===Christianity=== | |||
{{Main|Christian Plural Marriage}} | |||
Polygyny was not practiced by Christians during the New Testament era. Plural marriage is currently rejected by most sects of ].<ref>{{cite book |title= Polygamy: A Cultural and Biblical Perspective |last= Gaskiyane |first= I |year= 2000}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title= Catechism of the Catholic Church|last= Ratzinger |first= Joseph |page=411 |year= 1994}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title= The Documents of Vatican II|last= Abbott |first= Walter |page=249 |year= 1966}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.gotquestions.org/polygamy.html |title= Why did God allow polygamy / bigamy in the Bible?}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/M376ME.html/?searchterm=polygamy |title= Marriage|work = Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://orthodoxeurope.org/page/10/1.aspx#47 |title= Marriage|work = An Online Orthodox Catechism}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title= Mormon Polygamy: A History |last= Van Wagoner |first= Richard |year= 1992 | ISBN = 1560850574}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.lds.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?locale=0&sourceId=9887ec6f164b2110VgnVCM100000176f620a____&vgnextoid=bbd508f54922d010VgnVCM1000004d82620aRCRD |title= Polygamy (Plural Marriage)|work = The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.sbc.net/aboutus/basicbeliefs.asp |title= Southern Baptist Basic Beliefs|work = SBC}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.mennolink.org/doc/cof/art.19.html|work = MennoLink|title=The Mennonite Confession of Faith: Acticle 19. Family, Singleness, Marriage}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.gameo.org/encyclopedia/contents/D674.html|work = GAMEO|title=Dordrecht Confession of Faith 1632}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.lcms.org/graphics/assets/media/CTCR/human_sexuality1.pdf|work = Lutheran Church Missouri Synod|title=Human Sexuality: A Theological Perspective | pages = 10–11}}</ref> | |||
===Effects on women=== | |||
The current predominant belief among Christians in the United States is that polygyny is wrong and claim there is New Testament Biblical evidence to support that stance, citing for example {{bibleverse||Matthew|19:4-6|KJV}} (KJV): | |||
Inequality between husbands and wives is common in countries where polygyny is more frequently practiced because of limited education. In Africa polygyny was believed to be part of the way to build an empire. It was not until the post-colonialism era in Africa that polygyny began to be viewed as unjust or taboo. According to Natali Exposito, "in a study of the Ngwa Igbo Clan in Nigeria identified five principal reasons for men to maintain more than one wife: because having more than one wife allows the Ngwa husband to (1) have the many children that he desires; (2) heighten his prestige and boost his ego among his peers; (3) enhance his status within the community; (4) ensure a sufficient availability of labor to perform the necessary farm work and the processing of commercial oil-palm produce; and (5) satisfy his sexual urges."<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Exposito|first=Natali|date=2017|title=The Negative Impact of Polygamy on Women and Children in Mormon and Islamic Cultures|journal=Seton Hall University Law School Student Scholarship|url= http://scholarship.shu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1898&context=student_scholarship| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170219030849/http://scholarship.shu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1898&context=student_scholarship| archive-date= 19 February 2017}}</ref> Out of all of the reasons stated none are beneficial to the wives, but instead only beneficial to the husbands. In Egypt, feminists have fought for polygamy to be abolished, but it is viewed as a basic human right so the fight has been unsuccessful. In countries where polygyny is practiced less frequently, women have more equality in the marriage and are better able to communicate their opinions about family planning.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last1=Al-Krenawi|first1=Alean|last2=Graham|first2=John|date=2011|title=A Comparison Study of Psychological Family Function Marital Satisfaction of Polygamous and Monogamous women in Jordan|journal=Community Mental Health Journal|volume=47|issue=5|pages=594–602|pmid=21573772|doi=10.1007/s10597-011-9405-x|s2cid=11063695}}</ref> | |||
Women participating in polygynous marriages share common marital problems with women in a monogamous marriage; however, there are issues uniquely related to polygyny which affects their overall ] and have severe implications for women's health.<ref name=":2" /> Women practicing polygyny are susceptible to sexually transmitted infections, infertility, and mental health complications.<ref name=":1" /> Among the Logoli of ], the fear of ] or becoming infected with the ] virus has informed women's decisions about entering polygynous marriages. Some view polygyny as a means to prevent men from taking random sexual partners and potentially introducing STIs into relationships. Interviews conducted with some of the Logoli tribe in Kenya suggested they feared polygynous marriages because of what they have witnessed in the lives of other women who are currently in such relationships. The observed experiences of some of the women in polygynous unions tend to be characterized by frequent jealousy, conflicts, competition, tensions, and psychological stresses. Some of the husbands fail to share love and other resources equally; and envy and hatred, and sometimes violent physical confrontations become the order of the day among co-wives and their children. This discourages women from entering a polygynous marriage.<ref name="Gwako, Edwins Laban 1998">Gwako, Edwins Laban. "Polygamy Among the Logoli of Western Kenya". ''Anthropos'' 93.4 (1998). Web.</ref> Research shows that competition and conflict can intensify to unbearable level for co-wives causing women to commit ] due to psychological distress. Findings show that the wife order can affect life satisfaction. According to Bove and Valeggia, women who are senior wives often misuse their position to obtain healthcare benefits in countries where only one wife can become a recipient. The conflict between co-wives can attribute to the higher rates of mental health disorders and issues such as anxiety, depression, ], ], and paranoia. As well as this reduced marital/life satisfaction and low self-esteem has been shown to be more prevalent among women in polygynous relationships when compared to women in monogamous relationships.<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal|last1=Bove|first1=Riley|last2=Valeggia|first2=Claudia|date=2009|title=Polygyny and Women's Health in Sub-Saharan Africa|journal=Social Science and Medicine|volume=68|issue=1|pages=21–29|doi=10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.09.045|pmid=18952335}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|journal=Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences |volume=2|issue=1|pages=47–62|last=Shepard|first=L.D.|title=The impact of polygamy on women's mental health: a systematic review|date=2013|doi=10.1017/S2045796012000121|pmid=22794315|pmc=6998378}}</ref> | |||
:And he answered and said unto them, Have ye not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female, | |||
:And said, For this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife: and they twain shall be one flesh? | |||
:Wherefore they are no more ], but one flesh. What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder." | |||
Various methods have been used to reduce the amount of jealousy and conflict among wives. These include sororal polygyny, in which the co-wives are sisters; and hut polygyny, in which each wife has her own residence and the husband visits them in rotation. A clear status hierarchy among wives is also sometimes used to avoid fighting by establishing unequivocally each wife's rights and obligations.<ref name="lee">{{cite book|title=Family Structure and Interaction: A Comparative Analysis|author=Lee, Gary R.|chapter=Structural Variety in Marriage|pages=91–92|edition=2nd, revised|publisher=University of Minnesota Press|date=1982}}</ref> Although there are several harmful aspects of this practice related to women, there are some reported personal and economic advantages for women such as sharing household and child rearing responsibilities. Also, wives share companionship and support with co-wives.<ref name=":1" /> | |||
Some{{Who|date=August 2010}} suggest the New Testament Church did ban polygyny for bishops (] 3:2). However, the word for "one" is correctly translated as "first" and as an indefinite article as well, which opens other possible interpretations.<ref></ref>{{Self-published inline|date=April 2010}} | |||
Studies of the Ngwa group in eastern Nigeria shows that on average, women in polygynous unions are 22–26 percent less fertile than women in monogamous unions. Data shows that the greater the intensity of polygyny, the lower the fertility of successive wives: 15 percent deficit for first wives; a 37 percent deficit for second wives; and a 46 percent deficit for third or more wives.<ref name=":4">{{Cite journal|last=Ukaegbu|first=Alfred O.|date=1977|title=Fertility of Women in Polygynous Unions in Rural Eastern Nigeria|journal=Journal of Marriage and Family|volume=39|issue=2|pages=397–404|doi=10.2307/351134 |jstor=351134}}</ref> Studies show that seems to exist because of the widening age gap between the successive order of wives and because of the decreasing exposure to coitus, if all coitus occurs in marriage.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Ware|first=Helen|date=1979|title=Polygyny: Women's Views in a Transitional Society, Nigeria 1975|journal=Journal of Marriage and Family|volume=41|issue=1|pages=185–195|doi=10.2307/351742 |jstor=351742}}</ref> | |||
===East Asia=== | |||
Having offspring is very important in Chinese culture. China has practiced polygyny for thousands of years. Polygyny had been legal and was written in the law as recently as the end of the Qing/Ching dynasty of the imperial China (1911). | |||
=== Disease === | |||
A part of the Confucian tradition indicates the importance of procreation, as it is considered to be part of filial piety. Therefore, it is possible that this type of thinking influenced the view towards polygyny. | |||
Studies show there are two mechanisms that could lead to higher prevalence rates of HIV in men and women who are in polygynous unions: partners in polygynous unions have more extra-marital relationships and thus increase each other's exposure to HIV; women who are recruited into a polygynous union are more likely to be HIV positive than those who marry a monogamous husband.<ref name="demog journal">{{Cite journal|last1=Reniers|first1=Georges|last2=Tfaily|first2=Rania|date=2012-08-01|title=Polygyny, Partnership Concurrency, and HIV Transmission in Sub-Saharan Africa|journal=Demography|volume=49|issue=3|pages=1075–1101|doi=10.1007/s13524-012-0114-z|pmid=22661302|s2cid=207472013 |doi-access=free}}</ref> In addition to these two mechanisms, variation in HIV prevalence rates by union type is possibly due to individuals in polygynous unions are typically part of a sexual network with concurrent partnerships.<ref name="demog journal"/> | |||
The ecological association between polygyny and HIV prevalence is shown to be negative at the sub-national level. HIV prevalence tends to be lower in countries where the practice of polygyny is common, and within countries it is lower in areas with higher levels of polygyny. Proposed explanations for the protective effect of polygyny include the distinctive structure of sexual networks produced by polygyny, the disproportionate recruitment of HIV positive women into marriages with a polygynous husband, and the lower coital frequency in conjugal dyads of polygynous marriages.<ref name=":2" /> | |||
In the past, Emperors could have hundreds to thousands of concubines. And subsequently rich officials and merchants could also have a number of concubines besides wives. The first wife is head or mother wife, other wives are under her headship if the husband is away, and others are concubines and have lower status than the full wives. Offspring from concubines did receive equal wealth/legacy from their father. | |||
For example, studies in Malawi have shown that for men and women in polygynous marriages, the rate of HIV is between 10 and 15 percent.<ref name="demog journal"/> About 14 percent of Malawi's population is infected with HIV, which causes AIDS, according to official figures. There are approximately 78,000 AIDS-related deaths and 100,000 new infections every year in the country.<ref name="mwale">{{Cite journal |last=Mwale |first=Biziwick |date=September 2002 |title=HIV/AIDS in Malawi |journal=Malawi Medical Journal |volume=14|issue=2 |pages=2–3 |pmc=3346002 |pmid=27528929}}</ref> | |||
The original wife (or legal wife) is referred to as the 正室 zhèngshì /정실 (main room) both in China, Japan and Korea. 大婆 dàpó (big woman/big wife) is the slang term. Both terms indicate the orthodox nature and hierarchy. The official wife is either called "big mother" (大媽 dàmā), mother or auntie. The child of the concubine simply addresses the big mother as auntie. | |||
===Criticism=== | |||
The written word for the second woman is 側室 cèshì /측실 and literally means "she who occupied the side room". This word is also used in both China and Japan. They are also called 妾 qiè/첩 in China and Korea. | |||
Criticism of polygyny focuses on the wellbeing of the wives in such marriages, including coercion, buying and selling of wives (such as through ], which is common in societies that practice polygyny<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/debtfirst5000yea00grae/page/131|title=Debt: The First 5,000 Years|last=Graeber|first=David|publisher=Melville House|date=2011|isbn=978-1-933633-86-2|pages=}}</ref>), concerns about inequality and the fate of the young men left without wives (such as the ]), as well as the relation between polygyny practiced on a large scale in a society and war.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.economist.com/the-economist-explains/2018/03/19/why-polygamy-breeds-civil-war|title = Why polygamy breeds civil war|newspaper = The Economist}}</ref> | |||
A notable critic of polygyny was ] nearly 8 centuries ago. He contended that polygyny is unjust to wives and children.<ref name=":10">{{Cite journal|url=http://law.emory.edu/elj/content/volume-64/issue-6/articles-and-essays/two-flesh-western-monogamy-polygamy.html|title=Why Two in One Flesh? The Western Case for Monogamy over Polygamy {{!}} Emory University School of Law {{!}} Atlanta, GA|last=Witte|first=John Jr.|journal=Emory Law Journal|date=January 2015|volume=64|issue=6|page=1675|language=en|access-date=2019-11-24}}</ref> He also argues that it creates rival stepchildren and forces them to compete for attention, food, and shelter. According to Aquinas, polygyny violates the requirements of fidelity between husband and wife.<ref name=":10" /> | |||
The common terms referring to the second woman and the act of having the second woman respectively are 二奶 (èrnǎi / yi nai), literally "the second wife". The terms have been widely used in the media.<ref></ref> Though illegal, it is still practiced by many richer men who can afford to support a ] and her subsequent children. The mass media often report polygyny cases of the rich and the famous. | |||
Polygyny has been criticized by ] such as Professor John O. Ifediora, who believes that women should be equal to men and not subject to them in marriage. Professor Ifediora also believes that polygyny is a "hindrance to social and economic development" in the continent of Africa due to women's lack of financial control.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Ifediora|first=John|date=2016|title=Polygamy As Further Subjugation Of African Women, And National Economies|url=http://www.casade.org/polygamy-subjugation-african-women-national-economies/|journal=CASADE|page=1|access-date=2017-04-03|archive-date=2017-04-04|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170404043456/http://www.casade.org/polygamy-subjugation-african-women-national-economies/}}</ref> Standard polygynist practices often leave women at a disadvantage if they make the decision to remove themselves from the polygynist lifestyle. To leave the marriage, women must repay their bride price. Though this is simple in thought, this is not simple in execution. To prevent their wives from leaving, husbands will often keep the bride price at high levels, which is often at an unpayable level for women.{{sfn|Boserup|1970|p=47}} In most cases, women do not have access to their children if they decide to leave polygyny, nor are they allowed to take them, due to cultural ideas of ownership in relation to progeny. ] sees polygyny as a form of oppression of women; she wrote: "In polygamy, also not a victimless crime, the practice is built on the subjugation of women to the men's needs and demands. Moreover, for many of the religious polygamists, the women are nothing but the means to a particular doctrinal end – creating more children to increase the man's odds of getting into heaven. Again, the men control the finances and the women are commodities, carrying out the sexual goals of the men. There can be no gender equality in this scenario, which is incapable of being squared with any viable theory of women's rights."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://supreme.findlaw.com/legal-commentary/the-two-ps-of-gender-inequality-prostitution-and-polygamy-how-the-laws-against-both-are-underenforced-to-protect-men-and-subjugate-women.html|title=The Two 'P's of Gender Inequality: Prostitution and Polygamy – How the Laws Against Both Are Underenforced to Protect Men and Subjugate Women|last=Hamilton|first=Marci A.|date=9 July 2009|website=FindLaw}}</ref> First wives in polygynous marriages are often in a difficult situation, when the law or religious code does not require their consent or input for new wives to be admitted in the marriage, so the first wife is forced to accept any new women brought into the family by the husband and to get along with them.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-kenya-women-polygamy-insight-idUSKBN1L0009|title = 'Put up and shut up': Polygamy breeds poverty for Kenyan women and children|newspaper = Reuters|date = 15 August 2018}}</ref> Polygyny is criticized because of its asymmetrical, unequal marital arrangement, where the husband has sexual/romantic relations with several women, but the wives can only have such a relation with one man, their husband, which often leads to rigid gender roles in the marriage.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Brooks |first1=Thom |title=The Problem with Polygamy |journal=Philosophical Topics |date=2009 |volume=37 |issue=2 |pages=109–122 |doi=10.5840/philtopics20093727 |jstor=43154559 |s2cid=53332349 |url=http://dro.dur.ac.uk/10785/1/10785.pdf }}</ref> | |||
====People's Republic of China (PRC)==== | |||
{{Refimprove|date=March 2009}} | |||
In modern mainland China, polygamy (and by extension polygyny) is illegal under Marriage Law passed in 1951{{Dubious|date=March 2009}}, except for those members of an ethnic minority who traditionally practice polygamy (both polygyny and polyandry){{Dubious|date=May 2010}}. Polygyny was seen as a characteristic of the ] and as such, many senior Communist leaders who had mistresses and concubines during the ] were forced to disband them. Because of this, polygyny is virtually unheard of in China today{{Citation needed|date=May 2010}}.<!---I hate to use Dubious again, but these statements seem very unfounded. Source them when you can, please---> | |||
A criticism against polygyny is that in almost all cultures and religious communities that practice it, polygyny is the only form of polygamy that is allowed; and, as such, this violates modern principles of equality between men and women, especially as in many such places females having multiple partners is violently punished through ]s and ], or discouraged through ].<ref>{{Cite journal|url=http://classic.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/MurdochUeJlLaw/2005/2.html|last=Struensee |first=Vanessa von|title=The Contribution of Polygamy to Women's Impoverishment: An Argument for Its Prohibition|date=2005 |volume=12 |issue=1–2|journal=Murdoch University Electronic Journal of Law}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Somali woman 'with 11 husbands' stoned to death by al-Shabab |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-44055536 |work=BBC News |date=9 May 2018 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Akweongo |first1=Patricia |last2=Jackson |first2=Elizabeth F. |last3=Appiah-Yeboah |first3=Shirley |last4=Sakeah |first4=Evelyn |last5=Phillips |first5=James F. |title=It's a woman's thing: gender roles sustaining the practice of female genital mutilation among the Kassena-Nankana of northern Ghana |journal=Reproductive Health |date=1 March 2021 |volume=18 |issue=1 |page=52 |doi=10.1186/s12978-021-01085-z |pmid=33648528 |pmc=7923333 |doi-access=free }}</ref> In the ], there has been controversy surrounding the ] that practices polygyny, after the community has been marred by accusations of child sexual abuse, welfare fraud, and child labor trafficking, that culminated in the ] of polygynous leader ].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Dark |first=Stephen |url=https://www.theguardian.com/society/2017/nov/17/fundamentalist-mormons-sister-wives-homelessness|title=As a polygamist community crumbles, 'sister wives' are forced from homes|work=]|date=17 November 2017}}</ref> | |||
However, with the opening up of the country and the increased contact with Hong Kong and Taiwan, certain polygamous activities began appearing. Cross-border polygyny is ever increasing between PRC, Hong Kong and ROC.{{Dubious|date=March 2009}}<!---Slanderous information---> | |||
==Premodern era== | |||
====Taiwan – Republic of China (ROC)==== | |||
Polygyny is illegal in the 1930 ROC civil law.<ref></ref> However, it is common for some richer Taiwanese to have secret second lovers who become concubines not living together with the wife.{{Citation needed|date=March 2007}} Taiwanese merchants, businessmen and workers are stationed in mainland China during work trips, and it is usual to keep secret lovers or even secret families there. | |||
In Africa, the Americas, and Southeast Asia in the Premodern Era, circa 600 BCE – 1600 CE, both monogamy and polygyny occurred. Polygyny occurred even in areas of where monogamy was prevalent. Wealth played a key role in the development of family life during these times. Wealth meant the more powerful men had a principal wife and several secondary wives, known as ''resource polygyny''. Local rulers of villages usually had the most wives as a sign of power and status. Conquerors of villages would often marry the daughters of the former leaders as a symbol of conquest. The practice of resource polygyny continued with the spread and expansion of Islam in Africa and Southeast Asia. Children born into these households were considered free. Children born to free or slave concubines were free, but had lesser status than those born to wives. Living arrangements varied between areas. In Africa, each wife usually had their own house, as well as property and animals. In many other parts of the world, wives lived together in seclusion, under one household. A '']'' (also known as a "forbidden area") was a special part of the house for the wives.<ref>Wiesner-Hanks, Merry E. Gender in History: Global Perspectives. 2nd ed., Wiley-Blackwell, 2011. (p. 34)</ref> | |||
====Hong Kong and Macau==== | |||
Polygyny was banned in October 1971 but the practice is still evident. ] men in ] could still practice polygamy by virtue of the ], which ended only with the passing of the Marriage Act of 1971. A famous example is Dr ] who owns the ] in ]. He has four wives. His uncle has 12 wives.{{Citation needed|date=September 2007}} | |||
==By country== | |||
Kevin Murphy of the ] reported on the cross-border polygamy phenomenon in Hong Kong in 1995.<ref>.</ref> The cost of maintaining a second family is lower in the PRC. Since work pressure in Hong Kong is extremely high and the birth rate is the lowest in the world, many local businessmen keep a secret concubine across the border in mainland China.{{Citation needed|date=September 2007}} Girls in mainland China are moreover more willing to be full-time mothers at a younger age. | |||
{{Further|Legality of polygamy}} | |||
===Africa=== | |||
In a research paper of Berlin Humboldt University on sexology, Doctor Man-Lun Ng estimated about 300,000 men to have mistresses in China. In 1995, 40% of extramarital affairs involved a stable partner<ref></ref> | |||
====Kenya==== | |||
Polygynous marriage was preferred among the Logoli and other ] sub ethnic groups. Taking additional wives was regarded as one of the fundamental indicators of a successfully established man. Large families enhanced the prestige of Logoli men. Logoli men with large families were also capable of obtaining justice, as they would be feared by people, who would not dare to use force to take their livestock or other goods from them. Interviews with some of the contemporary Logoli men and women who recently made polygynous marriages yielded data which suggest that marrying another wife is usually approached with considerable thought and deliberation by the man. It may or may not involve or require the consent of the other wives and prospective wife's parents. A type of "]" arrangement was reported to have been observed, in which some wives who are unable to bear children, find fulfillment in the children and family provided by a husband taking additional wives.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Laban Moogi Gwako|first=Edwins|title=Polygyny among the Logoli of Western Kenya|journal=Anthropos|volume=93|issue=4/6|pages=331–348|quote="... encouraged their husbands to marry other wives so that they may engage themselves and bestow their affection upon the co-wives' children."|jstor=40464835|date=1998}}</ref> Some of the men indicated that they were pressured by their parents to marry another wife, who could contribute additional income to the family. Some of the young polygynous men indicated that they were trapped in polygyny because of the large number of single women who needed and were willing to take them as husbands although they were already married. Most of those second and third wives were older women who had not yet married.<ref name="Gwako, Edwins Laban 1998"/> | |||
Period drama is performed to this day depicting the former culture of polygamy (usually polygyny). A famous example is the '']'' novel '']'' by Hong Kong writer ], in which the protagonist ] has seven wives. The novel and its film and TV series adaptations became immensely popular among Chinese-speaking communities around the world. | |||
=== |
====Nigeria==== | ||
{{Main|Polygamy in Islam}} | |||
Customary law, one of the three legal systems in operation in Nigeria (the other two being Nigerian common law and ] law) allows for one man to legally marry more than one woman. | |||
Although it is permitted in most Islamic countries under certain circumstances,{{Clarify|date=July 2010}} polygamy is not widely practiced under Islam. Men who marry more than one woman may do so with the constraints that they are responsible for treating all their wives with kindness and dignity as well as for providing for their material needs equally. | |||
Unlike those marriages recognized by Sharia, there is no limit to the number of legal wives allowed under customary law. Currently polygyny is most common within ] and ] families within the country, and is largely practiced by the tribes native to its north and west. Although far less popular there, it is nonetheless also legal in Nigeria's east and south. | |||
Many majority ] countries retain the traditional ] which interprets teachings of the Quran to permit polygamy with up to four wives, as long as it is practiced under the specified conditions. Exceptions to this include ], ], ], and former ] republics. Though about 70% of the population of Albania is ], the majority is non-practicing. Turkey and Tunisia are countries with overwhelmingly Muslim populations that enforce ] by law. In the former USSR republics, a prohibition against polygamy has been inherited from ]. A current revival of polygamy in the ] has fueled attempts to re-legalize and re-legitimize it in some countries and communities where it is illegal. | |||
Polygyny varies according to a woman's age, religion and educational experience. Research conducted in the city of Ibadan, the second largest city in Nigeria, shows that non-educated women are significantly more likely (58%) to be in a polygynous union compared to college educated women (4%).<ref name=":4" /> Followers of traditional African religions are expected to have as many wives as they can afford. Muslim men are allowed up to 4 wives and only if they can be provided for and treated equally. Christians are typically (and expected to be) monogamous.<ref name=":4" /> | |||
====Russia==== | |||
Polygamy is illegal throughout the ] but is tolerated in predominantly Muslim republics such as Chechnya, ], and ].<ref>.</ref> ], President of the ], has been quoted on radio as saying that the depopulation of ] by war justifies legalizing polygamy.<ref>.</ref> Kadyrov has been supported by Nafigallah Ashirov, the Chairman of the Council of Grand ]s of Russia, with the statement that polygamy is already widespread among Muslim communities of the country.<ref>.</ref> | |||
Among the Ngwa group in Eastern Nigeria, studies show that 70% of polygynous marriages consist of illiterate men and women, compared to 53% in monogamous marriages.<ref name=":4" /> | |||
Although non-Muslim Russian populations are historically monogamous, Russian politician ] offered to legalize polygyny in order to tackle the demographic crisis of ]. Zhirinovsky made his first proposal to legalize polygamy as early as 1993, after Kadyrov's declaration that he would introduce an amendment to legalize polygyny for all Russian citizens.<ref>.</ref><ref>.</ref> | |||
==== Malawi ==== | |||
While polygynous marriages are not legally recognized under the civil marriage laws of Malawi, customary law affords a generous amount of benefits to polygynous unions, ranging from inheritance rights to child custody.<ref name="sigi">{{Cite news|title=Figures 18 and 2.10. Social institutions and gender index (SIGI)|doi = 10.1787/888933163273}}</ref> It has been estimated that nearly one in five women in Malawi live in polygynous relationships.<ref name="sigi" /> | |||
Efforts to abolish the practice and de facto recognition of polygyny have been widely apparent throughout the recent years in Malawi; led mainly by anti-AIDS organizations and feminist groups. An effort led in 2008 to outlaw polygyny in the country was fiercely opposed by Islamic religious leaders, citing the practice as a cultural, religious and pragmatic reality of the nation.<ref>{{Citation|last=Lamloum|first=Olfa|title=Islamonline. Jeux et enjeux d'un média " post-islamiste " déterritorialisé|date=2010|work=Médias et islamisme|pages=45–62|publisher=Presses de l'Ifpo|isbn=978-2-35159-172-7|doi=10.4000/books.ifpo.1369}}</ref> | |||
==== South Africa ==== | |||
{{Main|Polygamy in South Africa}} | |||
Polygynous marriages are legal under certain circumstances in South Africa. All polygynous marriages entered into in accordance with the provisions of the ] are legal. Polygyny in South Africa is practiced among the indigenous Bantu ethnic groups of South Africa, and also within the Muslim community. Although it was widespread in ancient times, it is now only common amongst richer men and men of status, such as chiefs and kings, including the former President of the Republic of South Africa, ].<ref>{{Cite web|date=2021-04-14|title=What's next for Zuma's wives?|url=https://citizen.co.za/lifestyle/entertainment/2473447/whats-next-for-zumas-wives/|access-date=2021-07-28|website=The Citizen|language=en}}</ref> Polygynous marriages of individuals over the age of 15 accounts for approximately 30,000 (0.1%) people in 2001. Both Islamic law and cultural family laws create a system in which Muslim men are encouraged to take up to four wives. Several factors for this include infertility or long-term illness of the first wife, excessive wealth on the part of the husband enabling him to support widowed or divorced mothers, and the economic benefits of large families.<ref name=":8">{{Cite journal|last=Moosa|first=N|date=2009-09-24|title=Polygynous Muslim Marriages in South Africa: Their Potential Impact on the Incidence of HIV/AIDS|journal=Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal/Potchefstroomse Elektroniese Regsblad|volume=12|issue=3|doi=10.4314/pelj.v12i3.46271 |doi-access=free|hdl=10394/3641|hdl-access=free}}</ref> | |||
Despite the historical and cultural history of polygyny among Muslim South Africans, polygynous unions are officially illegal on the national level in South Africa. After 1994, various laws such as the freedom of religion in the South African Constitution, the ratification of the UN's Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women and a proposed Draft Bill on Muslim Marriages have tackled the issue of Islamic polygynous unions in South Africa.<ref name=":8" /> | |||
==== Somalia ==== | |||
Polygyny is legal in Somalia and most commonly seen throughout Muslim communities. According to the Muslim tradition, men can have up to four wives. For a man to gain additional wives in Somalia, it must be granted by the court and it has to be proven that the first wife is either imprisoned or infertile.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.voanews.com/english/archive/2007-03/2007-03-12-voa14.cfm|title=Acceptance of Polygamy Slowly Changes in Muslim Africa|date=12 March 2007|work=Voice of America|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090507024715/http://www.voanews.com/english/archive/2007-03/2007-03-12-voa14.cfm|access-date=18 November 2019|archive-date=2009-05-07}}</ref> | |||
==== Mozambique ==== | |||
{{Further|Polygamy in Mozambique}} | |||
''']''' prohibits legal recognition of ], yet there are no legal restrictions against the practice itself, which has been reported to be quite widespread in the coastal country.<ref name=Reuters>{{cite web |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-mozambique-widows-polygamy-idUSKCN0ZL0T6 |title=Widows without sons in Mozambique accused of sorcery and robbed of land |last=Mwareya |first=Ray |date=5 July 2016 |website=Reuters |publisher= |access-date=30 December 2016 |quote=Although polygamy is prohibited in Mozambique there is no punishment. Across the country nearly a third of married women are thought to be in polygamous marriages, according to a NORAD survey.}}</ref> As of 2019, it was estimated that about nearly 20% of married women aged 15–49 are in polygynous unions.<ref name="Jansen & Agadjanian 2020">{{cite journal |last1=Jansen |first1=Natalie |last2=Agadjanian |first2=Victor |title=Polygyny and Intimate Partner Violence in Mozambique |journal=Journal of Family Issues |date=March 2020 |volume=41 |issue=3 |pages=338–358 |doi=10.1177/0192513x19876075 |pmid=33518874 |pmc=7845931 }}</ref> | |||
=== Australia === | |||
Polygyny is not legal in Australia. The Marriage Act of 1961 under section 94 states that any person who knowingly marries another whose marriage is legally ongoing carries out the act of bigamy. The penalty of bigamy is up to five years of imprisonment. The Full Court of the Family Court of Australia ruled on March 6, 2016, that it is illegal to have polygamous marriages. However, foreign marriages that have potential to be polygamous when it was started will be legally recognized in Australia. The court defined a potentially polygamous marriage as if the marriage is not yet polygamous, but if the country where the marriage marginally taken place permits polygamous marriages of either partner to the original marriage at a later date. Indigenous populations of Australia have been noted to engage in polygamous relationships. | |||
===Asia=== | |||
{{Cleanup lang|section|date=August 2023}} | |||
{{Further|Islam in Asia}} | |||
Many majority-] countries retain the traditional ], which interprets teachings of the Quran to permit polygamy with up to four wives. Exceptions to this include ], ], ], and former ] republics. Though about 70% of the population of Albania is ], the majority is non-practicing. Turkey and Tunisia are countries with overwhelmingly Muslim populations that enforce ] by law. In the former USSR republics, a prohibition against polygamy has been inherited from ]. In the 21st century, a revival of the practice of polygamy in the ] has contributed to efforts to re-establish its legality and legitimacy in some countries and communities where it is illegal. | |||
Proposals have been made to re-legalize polygamy in other ex-Soviet Muslim republics, such as ], ] and ].<ref>{{citation |url= http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/GB04Ag01.html |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20050207064554/http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/GB04Ag01.html |url-status= unfit |archive-date= February 7, 2005 |last= Saidazimova |first= Gulnoza|title= Polygamy hurts – in the pocket |newspaper= ] |date= February 4, 2005 }}</ref> | |||
The original wife (or legal wife) was referred to as the 正室 zhèngshì /정실 (main room) both in China, Japan and Korea. 大婆 dàpó ("big woman/big wife") is the slang term. Both terms indicate the orthodox nature and hierarchy. The official wife was called "big mother" (大媽 dàmā), mother or aunt. The child of the concubine addressed the big mother as "aunt". | |||
The written word for the second woman was ''側室 cèshì /측실'' and literally means "she who occupied the side room". This word was also used in both Korea and Japan. They were also called 妾 qiè/첩 in China and Korea. The common terms referring to the second woman, and the act of having the second woman respectively, are 二奶 (''èrnǎi''), literally "the second wife". | |||
====India==== | |||
] is, in general, prohibited and the vast majority of marriages are legally monogamous. Polygyny among Christians was banned in the late 19th century, while ] banned polygyny for Hindus. Currently, polygyny is only allowed among ]; but it is strongly discouraged by public policy.<ref>{{Cite web |date=18 May 2021 |title=Polygamy under Muslim Law |url=https://www.ejusticeindia.com/polygamy-under-muslim-law/ |access-date=24 June 2024}}</ref> Muslims are subject to the terms of ''The Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act of 1937'', interpreted by the ]. Prevalence of polygyny in India is very low: among married women, only 1.68 percent of Hindus, 2.45 percent of Muslims, 2.16 percent of Christians, and 1.16 percent of other religions live in polygynous marriages.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://paa2011.princeton.edu/papers/111406 |title=Bigamy in India: Finding from National Family Health Survey |author=Sayeed Unisa and Grace Bahalen Mundu |website=paa2011.princeton.edu}}</ref> | |||
====China==== | |||
{{See also|Concubinage#China}} | |||
In mainland China, polygamy is illegal under Civil code passed in 2020. This replaced a similar 1950 and 1980 prohibition.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.lawinfochina.com/display.aspx?lib=law&id=11|title=Marriage Law of the People's Republic of China|website=www.lawinfochina.com}}</ref> | |||
Polygyny where wives are of equal status had always been illegal in China, and had been considered a crime in some dynasties. In family laws from Tang to Qing Dynasties, the status of a wife, concubines and maid-mistresses could not be altered.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.douban.com/note/157772811/|title=毋以妾为妻|work=douban.com|access-date=10 December 2016}}</ref> However, concubinage was supported by law until the end of the ] of the imperial China (1911).{{citation needed|date=May 2012}} In the past, Emperors could and often did have hundreds to thousands of concubines. Rich officials and merchants of the elite also took concubines in addition to legal wives. The first wife was the head or mother wife; other wives were under her headship if the husband was away. Concubines had a lower status than full wives, generally not being seen in public with their husband and not having rights to decisions in the house. Children from concubines were considered inferior to those of the wife and did not receive equal wealth/legacy from their father. However they were considered legitimate, therefore had many more rights to inheritance of status and wealth than illegitimate children conceived outside a marriage. | |||
Polygamy was ''de facto'' widely practiced in the Republic of China from 1911 to 1949, before ] was defeated in the Civil War and retreated to Taiwan. ], a well-known warlord, notably declared he had three 'unknowns' – unknown number of rifles, unknown amount of money, and unknown number of concubines.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Portwood| first1 = Matthew R.| last2 = Dunn| first2 = John P.| title = A Tale of Two Warlords. Republican China During the 1920s | journal = Asian Studies| volume = 19| issue = 3 | date = 2014 | url = https://www.asianstudies.org/wp-content/uploads/a-tale-of-two-warlords-republican-china-during-the-1920s.pdf }}</ref> | |||
] men in ] could practice concubinage by virtue of the ]. This ended with the passing of the Marriage Reform Ordinance ({{Cite Hong Kong ordinance|178}}) in 1970. Kevin Murphy of the '']'' reported on the cross-border polygamy phenomenon in Hong Kong in 1995.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.iht.com/articles/1995/02/07/lunar.php |title= Hong Kong Targets Its Two-Family Men - International Herald Tribune|website=www.iht.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090210131453/http://www.iht.com/articles/1995/02/07/lunar.php |archive-date=February 10, 2009}}</ref> In a research paper of ] on sexology, Doctor Man-Lun Ng estimated about 300,000 men in China have mistresses. In 1995, forty percent of extramarital affairs in Hong Kong involved a stable partner.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061105131143/http://www2.hu-berlin.de/sexology/IES/hongkong.html |date=2006-11-05 }}, ''The International Encyclopedia of Sexuality''</ref> | |||
Period drama and historical novels frequently refer to the former culture of polygamy (usually polygyny). An example is the '']'' novel '']'' by Hong Kong writer ], in which the protagonist ] has seven wives (In a later edition of the novel, Princess Jianning was assigned as the wife, while others are concubines). | |||
====Kyrgyzstan==== | ====Kyrgyzstan==== | ||
A proposal to decriminalize polygamy was heard by the Kyrgyz parliament. It was supported by the Justice Minister, the country's ombudsman, and the Muslim Women's organization ''],'' which had gathered 40,000 signatures in favour of polygamy. But, on March 26, 2007, parliament rejected the bill. President ] is known to oppose legalizing polygyny.<ref>, Radio Liberty, Radio Free Europe</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.rferl.org/a/1075507.html|title=Kyrgyz Lawmakers Reject Decriminalizing Polygamy|work=rferl.org|date=8 April 2008 |access-date=10 December 2016}}</ref> | |||
====Tajikistan==== | ====Tajikistan==== | ||
Due to |
Due to an increase in the number of polygamous marriages, proposals were made in ] to re-legalize polygamy.<ref>, EurasiaNet.org</ref> Tajik women who want to be second wives particularly support decriminalizing polygyny. Mukhiddin Kabiri, the Deputy Chairman of the ], says that legislation is unlikely to stop the growth in polygyny. He criticizes the ruling élite for speaking out against the practice while taking more than one wife themselves.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://iwpr.net/?p=rca&s=f&o=162938&apc_state=henirca2002|title=Institute for War and Peace Reporting|work=iwpr.net|access-date=10 December 2016}}</ref> | ||
==== Yemen ==== | |||
Polygyny is legal in Yemen, a majority Muslim nation, which follows Islamic tradition where polygyny is acceptable up to four wives only if the husband treats all wives justly. Seven percent of married women in Yemen are a part of polygamous relationship. Reports conducted in the country have shown that rural regions are more likely to have polygamous relationships than those in cities or coastal areas.<ref>{{cite news |title=Health: Proximate Determinations of Fertility |url=http://www.yementimes.com/99/iss11/health.htm |work=Yemen Times |issue=11: 15–21 March |date=March 1999 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090325093659/http://www.yementimes.com/99/iss11/health.htm |archive-date=25 March 2009 |volume=IX |language=en |id=}}</ref> | |||
=== |
=== Europe === | ||
There have also been recent arguments in favour of re-legalizing polygamy in other ex-Soviet Muslim republics like ], ] and ].<ref>.</ref> | |||
====Bosnia and Herzegovina==== | ====Bosnia and Herzegovina==== | ||
The Muslim communities of ] |
The Muslim communities of ] traditionally practiced polygamy but the practice was last observed in ] in the early 1950s.<ref>, Every Culture</ref> Although illegal in the country, polygamy is encouraged by certain religious circles, and the number of practitioners has increased. This trend appears linked with the advent of fundamentalist ] in the ].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.b92.net/eng/insight/opinions.php?nav_id=40280|title=Emissaries of Militant Islam Make Headway in Bosnia|work=B92.net|access-date=10 December 2016}}</ref> | ||
The ] population in neighbouring ] has also been |
The ] population in neighbouring ], ], has also been influenced by this trend in Bosnia. They have suggested creating an entire Islamic jurisdiction including polygamy, but these proposals have been rejected by Serbia. The top cleric, the Mufti of ], Muamer Zukorlić, has taken a second wife.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wluml.org/english/newsfulltxt.shtml?cmd%5B157%5D=x-157-546374|title=Bosnia and Herzegovina: The veil comes down, again – Women Reclaiming and Redefining Cultures|work=wluml.org|access-date=10 December 2016|archive-date=29 April 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090429193723/http://www.wluml.org/english/newsfulltxt.shtml?cmd%5B157%5D=x-157-546374}}</ref> | ||
==== |
====Russia==== | ||
Factual polygamy and sexual relationships with several adult partners are not punishable in accordance with current revisions of ] and ]. But multiple marriage cannot be registered and officially recognised by Russian authorities because ] (section 14 and others) prohibits registration of marriage if one of person is in another registered marriage in Russia or another country. Polygamy is tolerated in predominantly Muslim republics such as ], ], and ].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article338474.ece |location=London |first=Andrew |last=Osborn |title=War-ravaged Chechnya needs polygamy, says its leader |work=The Independent |date=2006-01-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060117043122/http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article338474.ece |archive-date=2006-01-17 }}</ref> | |||
In ], polygamy has been illegal since the adoption of the Turkish Civil Code in 1926, a milestone in ]'s secularist reforms. | |||
Chechen politician ] actively advocated for polygynous marriage to gain legal recognition. Muslim leaders such as ]<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.rosbalt.ru/main/2006/01/13/240493.html|title=Верховный муфтий России – за многоженство (in Russian).|last=Rosbalt|date=13 January 2006|access-date=13 November 2019}}</ref> also pushed for the legal recognition of polygynous marriage. | |||
Polygamy is a common occurrence in ] villages.<ref>.</ref> Overall, it is on the rise in Turkey.<ref></ref> An opinion poll in 2004 showed that 63% of Turks favored polygamy.<ref></ref> On April 6, 2007, the Municipal Assembly of Çıplaklı in ], composed of members of the ruling moderate Islamist ] and conservative-liberal ], unanimously adopted a resolution to support men who consider taking a second wife (''kuma''). The people of Çıplaklı are ], a ] ethnicity who practice ]. "When we go to the summer pastures and leave our wives behind, we feel very lonely," explained Ali İhsan Topal, a member of the Assembly from the AK Parti.<ref>.</ref> | |||
Polygyny was legalized and documented in unrecognised ] but Russian authorities had annulled these polygynous marriages after they regained control over territory of Ichkeria. Later Ramzan Kadyrov, President of the ], has been quoted on radio as saying that the depopulation of ] by war justifies legalizing polygamy.<ref>, Pilegesh.org blog</ref> Kadyrov has been supported by Nafigallah Ashirov, the Chairman of the Council of Grand ]s of Russia, who has said that polygamy is already widespread among Muslim communities of the country.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=32064 |title=Inter Press Service – News and Views from the Global South |work=ipsnews.net |access-date=10 December 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120212142650/http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=32064 |archive-date=12 February 2012 }}</ref> | |||
====Sororal polygyny==== | |||
'''Sororal polygyny''' is a ] in which two or more sisters share a husband. In ], this type of polgyny is specifically prohibited. | |||
Reference from ] (Chapter 4, verse 23): | |||
{{quote|Forbidden unto you are your mothers, and your daughters, and your sisters, and your father's sisters, and your mother's sisters, and your brother's daughters and your sister's daughters, and your foster-mothers, and your foster-sisters, and your mothers-in-law, and your step-daughters who are under your protection (born) of your women unto whom ye have gone in - but if ye have not gone in unto them, then it is no sin for you (to marry their daughters) - and the wives of your sons who (spring) from your own loins. And (it is forbidden unto you) that ye should have two sisters together, except what hath already happened (of that nature) in the past (before this revelation). Lo! Allah is ever Forgiving, Merciful.}} | |||
In Ingushetia in July, 1999 polygyny was officially recognised and allowed by edict of president of Ingushetia ] and registration of polygyny marriages had been started allowing men to marry up to four wives as it relates to Muslim tradition. But this edict had been formally suspended soon by edict of ] ]. One year later this edict of Aushev had been cancelled by the Supreme Court of Ingushetia because of contradiction with Family Code of Russia.<ref name="Aushev Lentapedia">{{cite web|url=http://www.lenta.ru/lib/14163106/full.htm |title=Лентапедия. Биография Руслана Аушева |language=ru |access-date=2009-12-08 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111101021758/http://lenta.ru/lib/14163106/full.htm |archive-date=2011-11-01 }}</ref> | |||
===United States and Canada=== | |||
Although non-Muslim Russian populations have historically practiced monogamy, Russian politician ] offered to legalize polygyny to encourage population growth and correct the ]. Zhirinovsky first proposed to legalize polygyny in 1993, after Kadyrov's declaration that he would introduce an amendment to legalize polygyny for all Russian citizens.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070930202658/http://www.sptimes.ru/index.php?action_id=2&story_id=14235 |date=2007-09-30 }}, ''The St. Petersburg Times''</ref><ref>{{cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4610396.stm | work=BBC News | title=Polygamy proposal for Chechen men | date=2006-01-13}}</ref> | |||
Polygyny is illegal in the United States and Canada, with some exceptions existing in Canada's provinces of ] and ] | |||
====Serbia==== | |||
] is a belief in the validity of selected ] aspects of ] as taught and practiced in the nineteenth century. The principle most often associated with Mormon fundamentalism is ], a form of polygyny first taught by ], the founder of the ]. | |||
Serbian Law, which in turn is based on the French Civil Code, permits individuals to only be married monogamously. However, the jurisdiction of the civil law exclusively oversees the marriages conducted in civilian ceremonies, and not those conducted in the religious ones. Given that the law does not require couples to register a religious marriage in the registry of civil marriages (whilst in the neighbouring Bosnia, failing to do so can result in a fine), individuals seeking to practice polygamy are not restricted to do so. One of the best known examples was the chief Mufti of the Islamic Community in Serbia, Dr. Muamer Zukorlic, who was simultaneously married to three women. | |||
====United Kingdom==== | |||
At times, sources have claimed there are as many as 60,000 Mormon fundamentalists in the United States,<ref>Martha Sonntag Bradley, "Polygamy-Practicing Mormons" in ] and Martin Baumann (eds.) (2002). ''Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia'' '''3''':1023–1024.</ref><ref>'']'', 2001-01-02.</ref> with fewer than half of them living in polygamous households.<ref>Ken Driggs, "Twentieth-Century Polygamy and Fundamentalist Mormons in Southern Utah", '']'', Winter 1991, pp. 46–47.</ref> However, others have suggested that there may be as few as 20,000 Mormon fundamentalists<ref>Irwin Altman, "Polygamous Family Life: The Case of Contemporary Mormon Fundamentalists", '']'' (1996) p. 369.</ref><ref name = DMQ>D. Michael Quinn, , ] '''31'''(2) (Summer 1998): 1–68, accessed 2009-03-27.</ref> with only 8,000 to 15,000 practicing polygamy.<ref>Stephen Eliot Smith, "'The Mormon Question' Revisited: Anti-Polygamy Laws and the Free Exercise Clause", LL.M. thesis, ], 2005.</ref> The largest Mormon fundamentalist groups are the ] (FLDS Church) and the ] (AUB). The FLDS Church is estimated to have 10,000 members residing in the sister cities of ], Utah and ], Arizona; ], Texas; ], Colorado; ], Colorado; ] and ], British Columbia; and ], South Dakota.<ref> - Helping Victims of Domestic Violence and Child Abuse in Polygamous Communities. A joint report from the offices of the Attorney Generals of Arizona and Utah.</ref> | |||
In the UK, there are believed to be up to 20,000 polygamous marriages in Britain's Muslim community,<ref>http://www.channel4.com/info/press/news/channel-4-documentary-gains-access-to-the-men-with-many-wives "The Men with many wives" by Channel 4</ref> even though bigamy is an offence.<ref>http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Vict/24-25/100/crossheading/bigamy/enacted Offences Against the Person Act 1861</ref> All marriages that happen within the United Kingdom must be monogamous and meet the requirements of the relevant legislation to be perceived as legitimately substantial. For polygamous unions in the UK to be viewed as valid, the people must live in a country where a person is allowed to have more than one spouse and get married in a nation that permits it. There is evidence of unregistered polygamous marriages in the UK, performed through religious ceremonies, that are not recognized under UK law.<ref name=":9">{{Citation|last1=Fairbairn|first1=Catherine|last2=Kennedy|first2=Steven|last3=Gower|first3=Melanie|date=1 February 2023|title=Research Briefing: Polygamy|url=https://researchbriefings.parliament.uk/ResearchBriefing/Summary/SN05051|publisher=House of Commons Library; United Kingdom Parliament}}</ref> In May 2016, a cross-bench member of the British House of Lords Baroness Cox introduced the Arbitration and Mediation Services (Equality) Bill. This Bill would ensure that individuals in polygamous marriages and religiously recognized marriages not considered legal in the UK are informed that they could be without legal protection if they were caught by authorities.<ref name=":9" /> | |||
===The Americas=== | |||
] 1969)]] | |||
====Chile==== | |||
{{Further|Mapuche polygamy}} | |||
Polygyny has a long history among the ] people of southern ]. Wives that share the same husband are often relatives, such as sisters, who live in the same community.<ref name=lainfo2013/> Having the same husband does not imply women belong to the same household.<ref name=lainfo2013/> Mapuche polygamy has no legal recognition in ].<ref name=lainfo2013>{{Cite news|title=La poligamia pervive en las comunidades indígenas del sur de Chile|url=https://www.lainformacion.com/asuntos-sociales/la-poligamia-pervive-en-las-comunidades-indigenas-del-sur-de-chile_iIqbAIrxZAT9vQNPaqApd1/|last=Rausell|first=Fuencis|date=June 1, 2013|access-date=January 20, 2021|work=La Información|language=Spanish}}</ref> This puts women who are not legally married to their husband at disadvantage to any legal wife in terms of securing inheritance.<ref name=lainfo2013/> It is thought that present-day polygamy is much less common than it once was, in particularly compared with the time before the ] (1861–1883) when ] lost its autonomy.<ref name=lainfo2013/> Albeit chiefly rural, Mapuche polygamy has also been reported in the low-income peripheral communes of ].<ref name=Millaleo2018-133>{{Cite thesis|title=Poligamia mapuche / Pu domo ñi Duam (un asunto de mujeres): Politización y despolitización de una práctica en relación a la posición de las mujeres al interior de la sociedad mapuche|last=Millaleo Hernández|first=Ana Gabriel|degree=PhD|date=2018|publisher=]|url=http://repositorio.conicyt.cl/bitstream/handle/10533/220808/TesisDocAnaMillaleoCONICYT.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y|place=Santiago de Chile|language=Spanish|page=133}}</ref> | |||
====North America==== | |||
==Nature== | |||
] | |||
{{Expand section|date=December 2009}} | |||
{{Further|Latter Day Saint polygamy in the late-19th century}} | |||
Several species such as the ] ''Apodemus sylvaticus'' possess a polygamous social order in which males mate with multiple females. Such circumstances result in competition between males during reproductive periods. This competition can extend beyond the superficial scrambling for females and exists at a microscopic level as competition between spermatozoa in the reproductive tract of the female organism. | |||
Polygyny is illegal in the United States and Canada. | |||
] believes in the validity of selected ] aspects of ] as taught and practiced in the nineteenth century. Fundamentalist Latter-Day Saints' teachings include ], a form of polygyny first taught by ], the founder of the ]. | |||
A variety of methods for practicing polygamy can be observed in the animal kingdom.<ref></ref> For example, female defense polygyny is seen in marine amphipods, where the male herds the females into a cluster. This allows them to be protected by the male, while the male has continuous access to the females. Resource defense polygyny is a strategy seen in ] fish, where the male collects empty snail shells which the females use to lay eggs. A third type is scramble competition polygamy, where females are widely spaced or fertility is time-limited, as in ]. | |||
In the 21st century, several sources have claimed as many as 60,000 fundamentalist Latter-day Saints in the United States,<ref>Martha Sonntag Bradley, "Polygamy-Practicing Mormons" in ] and Martin Baumann (eds.) (2002). ''Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia'' '''3''':1023–1024.</ref><ref>'']'', 2001-01-02.</ref> with fewer than half of them living in polygamous households.<ref>Ken Driggs, "Twentieth-Century Polygamy and Fundamentalist Mormons in Southern Utah", '']'', Winter 1991, pp. 46–47.</ref> Others have suggested that there may be as few as 20,000 Mormon fundamentalists<ref>Irwin Altman, "Polygamous Family Life: The Case of Contemporary Mormon Fundamentalists", ''Utah Law Review'' (1996) p. 369.</ref><ref name=DMQ>D. Michael Quinn, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110613232550/http://content.lib.utah.edu/u/?%2Fdialogue%2C10141 |date=2011-06-13 }}, '']'' 31(2) (Summer 1998): 1–68, accessed 27 March 2009.</ref> with only 8,000 to 15,000 practicing polygamy.<ref>Stephen Eliot Smith, "'The Mormon Question' Revisited: Anti-Polygamy Laws and the Free Exercise Clause", LL.M. thesis, ], 2005.</ref> The largest Mormon fundamentalist groups are the ] (FLDS Church) and the ] (AUB). The FLDS Church is estimated to have 10,000 members residing in the sister cities of ], Utah and ], Arizona; ], Texas; ], Colorado; ], Colorado; ] and ], British Columbia; ], South Dakota, and Montana.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050111224555/http://attorneygeneral.utah.gov/polygamy/The_Primer.pdf |date=2005-01-11 }} – Helping Victims of Domestic Violence and Child Abuse in Polygamous Communities. A joint report from the offices of the Attorneys General of Arizona and Utah.</ref> | |||
Elephant seals are known from long-term behavioral studies to be highly polygynous.<ref>http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/arh112v1</ref> | |||
Polygyny is also practiced by some Muslim immigrants to the US, especially those from Africa and Asia. ]'s '']'' estimated in 2008 that 50,000 to 100,000 American Muslims live in polygamous families.<ref>Barbara Bradley Hagerty, , ], 2008-05-27.</ref> | |||
In July 2022, a Mexican judge in the state of ]'s Eighth District Civil Court authorized the country's first threesome group marriage.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Carey |first1=Lydia |title=Judge gives go-ahead on Mexico's first polyamorous marriage |url=https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/mexico-first-polyamorous-marriage/ |website=Mexico News Daily |access-date=11 September 2022 |date=22 July 2022}}</ref> | |||
==Religion== | |||
=== Buddhism === | |||
] does not regard marriage as a ] – it is a ] affair, and normally Buddhist monks do not participate in it (though in some sects priests do marry). Hence marriage receives no religious sanction.<ref name="access to insight">{{cite web |url= http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/dewaraja/wheel280.html |title= Accesstoinsight.org |access-date= 13 September 2011}}</ref> Forms of marriage, in consequence, vary from country to country. | |||
] was legally recognized until 1935. ] outlawed polygyny from 2015. In ], polyandry was legal in the ], but outlawed by British after conquering the kingdom in 1815.<ref name="access to insight"/> When the Buddhist texts were translated into Chinese, the ]s of others were added to the list of inappropriate partners. ] was common traditionally, as was polygyny, and having several wives or husbands was never regarded as having sex with inappropriate partners.<ref name="Berzin2010"> | |||
{{cite web |url= http://studybuddhism.com/en/tibetan-buddhism/path-to-enlightenment/karma-rebirth/buddhist-sexual-ethics-main-issues |title= Buddhist Sexual Ethics: Main Issues |work= Study Buddhism |first= Alexander |last= Berzin |date= 7 October 2010 |archive-date= 30 January 2016 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20160130091910/http://next.berzinarchives.com/tibetan-buddhism/guidelines-for-study/relating-the-teachings-to-personal-relationships/buddhist-sexual-ethics-main-issues |url-status= live |df= dmy-all }} | |||
</ref> | |||
The Parabhava ] states that "a man who is not satisfied with one woman and seeks out other women is on the path to decline". Other fragments in the Buddhist scripture seem to treat polygamy unfavorably, leading some authors to conclude that Buddhism generally does not approve of it<ref name=" ethics of Buddhism">, Shundō Tachibana, Routledge, 1992, {{ISBN|978-0-7007-0230-5}}</ref> or alternatively regards it as a tolerated, but subordinate, marital model.<ref name="introduction to Buddhist ethics">: foundations, values, and issues, Brian Peter Harvey, Cambridge University Press, 2000, {{ISBN|978-0-521-55640-8}}</ref> | |||
===Christianity=== | |||
{{Main|Polygamy in Christianity}} | |||
Polygamy is not forbidden in the ]. The ] is largely silent on polygamy, however, some point to Jesus's repetition of the earlier scriptures, noting that a man and a wife "shall become one flesh".{{efn|{{bibleverse||Genesis|2:24|ESV}}, {{bibleverse||Matthew|19:3–6|ESV}}}} However, some look to ]'s writings to the ]: "Do you not know that he who is joined to a prostitute becomes one body with her? For, as it is written, 'The two will become one flesh.{{'"}}{{efn|{{bibleverse||1 Corinthians|6:16|ESV}}}} Supporters of polygamy argue this use of the phrase in relation to prostitution in this verse, means "becoming one flesh" refers to a merely physical, rather than spiritual, union, even when it is used about marriage in other verses.{{citation needed|date=August 2023}} | |||
Most Christian theologians argue that in Matthew 19:3–9 and referring to Genesis 2:24,{{efn|{{bibleverse|Genesis|2:24}}}} ] explicitly states a man should have only one wife: | |||
{{Blockquote|Have ye not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female, And said, For this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife: and they twain shall be one flesh?|source=Matthew 19:3–9{{efn|{{bibleverse|Matthew|19:3–9}}}} }} | |||
In the ], scriptures state that polygamy should not be practiced by certain church leaders. ] says that certain Church leaders should have but one wife: "A ''bishop'' then must be blameless, the husband of one wife ({{langx|grc-x-koine|mias gunaikos andra||one-woman man}}), vigilant, sober, of good behavior, given to hospitality, apt to teach". Verse 12 has similar advice regarding deacons having only one wife.{{efn|{{bibleverse|1 Timothy|3:2-12}}}} Similar counsel is repeated in the first chapter of the ].{{efn-lg|The digital ] lists only one manuscript (p. 46) as source of the verse, while nine other manuscripts have no such verse, cf. }} | |||
Periodically, Christian reform movements that have aimed at rebuilding Christian doctrine based on the Bible alone ('']'') have at least temporarily accepted polygyny as a Biblical practice. For example, during the ], in a document referred to simply as {{lang|de|Der Beichtrat}} (or ''The Confessional Advice'' ),<ref>, 10 December 1539, ]-Seidemann, 6:238–244</ref> ], whose reformation caused a schism in the Western Christian Church leading to the formation of the Lutheran Church, granted the ] ], who, for many years, had been living "constantly in a state of adultery and fornication",<ref name="Michelet1904">{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/lifelutherwritt00luthgoog |title=The Life of Luther Written by Himself |date=1904 |page= |chapter=Chapter III: 1536–1545 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/stream/lifelutherwritt00luthgoog#page/n271 |editor-last=Michelet |editor-link=Jules Michelet |translator-first=William |translator-last=Hazlitt |translator-link=William Hazlitt |publisher=] |location=London |series=Bohn's Standard Library}}</ref> a dispensation to take a second wife. The double marriage was to be done in secret, however, to avoid public scandal.<ref>] '''' 1:403–404 Excerpts from ''Der Beichtrat''</ref> Some fifteen years earlier, in a letter to the Saxon Chancellor Gregor Brück, Luther stated that he could not "forbid a person to marry several wives, for it does not contradict Scripture." ({{lang|la|Ego sane fateor, me non posse prohibere, si quis plures velit uxores ducere, nec repugnat sacris literis.}})<ref>Letter to the Chancellor ], 13 January 1524, ] 2:459.</ref> | |||
The ] hosted a regional conference in Africa, in which the acceptance of polygynists and their wives into full membership by the Lutheran Church in Liberia was defended as being permissible.<ref>{{cite book |last=Deressa |first=Yonas |title=The Ministry of the Whole Person |date=1973 |publisher=Gudina Tumsa Foundation |language=en |page=350}}</ref> The Lutheran Church in Liberia, while permitting men to retain their wives from marriages prior to being received into the Church, does not permit polygynists who have become Christians to marry more wives after they have received the sacrament of Holy ].<ref name="KilbridePage2012">{{cite book |last1=Kilbride |first1=Philip Leroy |last2=Page |first2=Douglas R. |title=Plural Marriage for Our Times: A Reinvented Option? |date=2012 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |language=en |isbn=978-0-313-38478-3 |page=188}}</ref> Evangelical Lutheran missionaries in Maasai also tolerate the practice of polygyny and in Southern Sudan, and some polygynists are becoming Lutheran Christians.<ref name="Moses2016">{{cite book |last=Mlenga |first=Moses |title=Polygamy in Northern Malawi: A Christian Reassessment |date=13 January 2016 |publisher=Mzuni Press |language=en |isbn=978-99960-45-09-7 |pages=41–42}}</ref> | |||
On the other hand, the Roman Catholic Church criticizes polygyny in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Under paragraph 2387 of "Other offenses against the dignity of marriage" of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, it states "is not in accord with the moral law". Additionally, paragraph 1645 of "The Goods and Requirements of Conjugal Love" states "The unity of marriage, distinctly recognized by our Lord, is made clear in the equal personal dignity which must be accorded to husband and wife in mutual and unreserved affection. Polygamy is contrary to conjugal love which is undivided and exclusive."<ref>{{Citation |url=https://www.vatican.va/archive/ccc_css/archive/catechism/ccc_toc.htm|title=Catechism of the Catholic Church|publisher=Vatican|access-date=14 November 2019}}</ref> There are small numbers of Roman Catholic theologians that claim polygyny can be an authentic form of marriage in certain regions such as Africa.<ref>Vittorio Messori (1985). ''The Ratzinger report: An exclusive interview on the state of the Church — Pope Benedict XVI'', Ignatius Press, p. 195. {{ISBN|0-89870-080-9}}</ref> | |||
In ], there has often been a tension between the Western Christian insistence on monogamy and the traditional practice of polygamy. In some instances in recent times there have been moves for accommodation; in other instances, churches have resisted such moves strongly. African Independent Churches have sometimes referred to those parts of the Old Testament that describe polygamy in defending the practice. | |||
===Hinduism=== | |||
The ] scriptures acknowledge numerous occasions of polygyny; it was the norm among kings, the nobility and the extremely wealthy. For instance ], the father of the ]s in ], had two wives Kunti and Madri. Similarly, ] had three chief wives: Kausalya, Sumitra, and Kaikeyi. Having more than one wife was a social custom that was believed to increase the prestige of a man.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rao |first=CN Shankar |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jjscEAAAQBAJ&dq=vivaha+man+woman&pg=PA103 |title=Sociology of Indian Society |date=September 2004 |publisher=S. Chand Publishing |isbn=978-81-219-2403-0 |page=106 |language=en}}</ref> Although many other personalities including ] had only one wife, as monogamy was regarded as the morally superior type of marriage, polygyny remained customary and widely acceptable among Hindus until it was legally abolished for Hindus in India by the Hindu Marriage Act of 1955. | |||
=== Islam === | |||
{{Main|Polygyny in Islam}} | |||
]]] | |||
Under ], Muslim men are allowed to practice polygyny, that is, they can have more than one wife at the same time. Muslim men can have up to four wives at a time. Polyandry, the practice of a woman having more than one husband, is not permitted. | |||
Based on verse 30:21 of ] the ideal relationship is the comfort that a couple find in each other's embrace: | |||
{{Blockquote|And one of His signs is that He created for you spouses from among yourselves so that you may find comfort in them. And He has placed between you compassion and mercy. Surely in this are signs for people who reflect.|{{qref|30|21|c=y}}}} | |||
Polygyny is allowed in the Quran but if a man fears he cannot deal justly with them he should only marry one. This is based on verse 4:3 of ] which says: | |||
{{Blockquote|If you fear you might fail to give orphan women their ˹due˺ rights ˹if you were to marry them˺, then marry other women of your choice—two, three, or four. But if you are afraid you will fail to maintain justice, then ˹content yourselves with˺ one or those ˹bondwomen˺ in your possession. This way you are less likely to commit injustice.|{{qref|4|3|c=y}}}} | |||
There are strict requirements to marrying more than one woman, as the man must treat them equally financially and in terms of support given to each wife, according to Islamic law.<ref name = Lukito>{{cite book|author=Ratno Lukito|title=Legal Pluralism in Indonesia: Bridging the Unbridgeable|page=81|publisher=]}}</ref> | |||
Muslim women are not allowed to marry more than one husband at once. However, in the case of a ] or their husbands' death they can remarry after the completion of ], as divorce is legal in Islamic law. A non-Muslim woman who flees from her non-Muslim husband and accepts ] can remarry without divorce from her previous husband, as her marriage with non-Muslim husband is Islamically dissolved on her fleeing. A non-Muslim woman captured during war by Muslims, can also remarry, as her marriage with her non-Muslim husband is Islamically dissolved at capture by Muslim soldiers. This permission is given to such women in verse 4:24 of Quran. The verse also emphasizes transparency, mutual agreement and financial compensation as prerequisites for matrimonial relationship as opposed to prostitution; it says: | |||
{{Blockquote|Also ˹forbidden are˺ married women—except ˹female˺ captives in your possession. This is God's commandment to you. Lawful to you are all beyond these—as long as you seek them with your wealth in a legal marriage, not in fornication. Give those you have consummated marriage with their due dowries. It is permissible to be mutually gracious regarding the set dowry. Surely God is All-Knowing, All-Wise. |{{qref|4|24|c=y}}}} | |||
] was monogamously married to ], his first wife, for 25 years, until she died. After her death, he married multiple women, mostly widows,<ref>"", IslamWeb.</ref> for social and political reasons.<ref>Sahar El-Nadi, "," OnIslam.net</ref> He had a total of nine wives, but not all at the same time, depending on the sources in his lifetime. The Qur'an does not give preference in marrying more than one wife. One reason cited for polygyny is that it allows a man to give financial protection to multiple women, who might otherwise not have any support (e.g. widows).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.islamweb.net/ver2/fatwa/ShowFatwa.php?lang=A&Id=18444&Option=FatwaId |title=IslamWeb |publisher=IslamWeb |date=7 February 2002 |access-date=13 September 2011}}</ref> However, the wife can set a condition, in the ], that the husband cannot marry another woman during their marriage. In such a case, the husband cannot marry another woman as long as he is married to his wife.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ahlalhdeeth.com/vb/showthread.php?t=165257 |title=ahlalhdeeth |publisher=ahlalhdeeth |date=12 September 2013 |access-date=13 September 2011 |archive-date=14 December 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131214201552/http://www.ahlalhdeeth.com/vb/showthread.php?t=165257 }}</ref> According to traditional Islamic law, each of those wives keeps their property and assets separate; and are paid ] and maintenance separately by their husband. Usually the wives have little to no contact with each other and lead separate, individual lives in their own houses, and sometimes in different cities, though they all share the same husband. | |||
In most Muslim-majority countries, polygyny is legal with ] being the only one where no restrictions are imposed on it. The practice is illegal in Muslim-majority ], ], ], ] and ]n countries.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XHF8AgAAQBAJ&pg=PT230|title=Women, Islam and Everyday Life: Renegotiating Polygamy in Indonesia|first=Nina|last=Nurmila|date=10 June 2009|publisher=Routledge|access-date=10 December 2016|via=Google Books|isbn=978-1-134-03370-6}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.thinkafricapress.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fthinkafricapress.com%2Ftunisia%2Ffuture-state-feminism#2848 |title=Tunisia: Protecting Ben Ali's Feminist Legacy |author=Maike Voorhoeve |work=] |date=31 January 2013 |access-date=23 January 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Kudat |first1=Ayșe |last2=Peabody |first2=Stan |last3=Keyder |first3=Çağlar |title=Social Assessment and Agricultural Reform in Central Asia and Turkey |date=3 April 2000 |publisher=The World Bank |isbn=978-0-8213-4678-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=njPYSxcBV-EC&pg=PA272 |language=en |doi=10.1596/0-8213-4678-4|access-date=10 December 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite press release|url= https://www.un.org/press/fr/2007/FEM1625.doc.htm|title=Les Experts du CEDAW s'Inquiètent de la Persistance de Stéréotypes Sexistes et de la Situation des Minorités en Serbie|publisher=]|date= May 16, 2007|access-date= February 3, 2016|author1=((Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women))|author2=((UN Department of Public Information))|id=Economic and Social CouncilFEM/1625|language=fr}}</ref> | |||
Countries that allow polygyny typically also require a man to obtain permission from his previous wives before marrying another; they may require the man to prove that he can financially support multiple wives. In ] and ], a man must justify taking an additional wife at a court hearing before he is allowed to do so.<ref name="Modern">{{cite book |title=Modern Muslim Societies |date=2011 |publisher=Marshall Cavendish Reference |location=Tarrytown, New York |isbn=978-0-7614-7927-7 |pages=32–35 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/modernmuslimsoci0000unse/page/34/mode/2up |chapter=Family Life — Focus: Polygamy|via=Internet Archive}} </ref> In ], the government encouraged polygyny in 2001 to increase the population.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/1493309.stm |title=Omar Hassan al-Bashir, has urged Sudanese men to take more than one wife to increase the population |work=BBC News |date=15 August 2001 |access-date=13 September 2011}}</ref> | |||
===Judaism=== | |||
{{See also|Pilegesh|Polygamy#Judaism}} | |||
Polygyny is not forbidden in the ] and over 40 important figures had more than one wife, such as Esau,{{efn|{{bibleverse|Genesis|26:34|RSV}}{{bibleref2-nb|Genesis|28:6–9|RSV}}}} Elkanah,{{efn|{{bibleverse|1 Samuel| 1:1–8|RSV}}}} and Solomon.{{efn|{{bibleverse|1 Kings |11:1–3|RSV}}}} Moses had two or three wives; Zipporah,{{efn|{{bibleverse|Exodus| 2: 21|RSV}}}} the daughter of Hobab{{efn|{{bibleverse|Numbers| 10: 291|RSV}}}} and the "Cushite" woman,{{efn|{{bibleverse|Numbers| 12: 1|RSV}}}}{{efn-lg|Translated as ''the Ethiopian woman'' in the ]. {{bibleverse|Numbers|12: 1|KJV}}}} even though some Bible interpreters dispute this.<ref name="Meyers Craven Kraemer 2000 p. 381">{{cite book | first1=Alice | last1=Ogden Bellis | editor-last1=Meyers | editor-first1=Carol | editor-last2=Craven | editor-first2=Toni | editor-last3=Kraemer | editor-first3=Ross S. | title=Women in Scripture: A Dictionary of Named and Unnamed Women in the Hebrew Bible, the Apocryphal/Deuterocanonical Books and the New Testament | publisher=Houghton Mifflin Harcourt | year=2000 | isbn=978-0-547-34558-1 | chapter=Cushite Woman, Wife of Moses | chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6txrDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT381 | access-date=23 November 2023 | page=381}}</ref><ref name="Brand Mitchell Staff 2015 p. 4">{{cite book | first1=R. | last1=Laird Harris | editor-last1=Brand | editor-first1=Chad | editor-last2=Mitchell | editor-first2=Eric | editor3=Holman Reference Editorial Staff | title=Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary | publisher=B&H Publishing Group | year=2015 | isbn=978-0-8054-9935-3 | chapter=Aaron | chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jgxCDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA4 | access-date=23 November 2023 | page=4}}</ref><ref name="Kugel Kugel 2009 p. 532">{{cite book | last=Kugel | first=James L. | title=Traditions of the Bible: A Guide to the Bible As It Was at the Start of the Common Era | publisher=Harvard University Press | year=2009 | isbn=978-0-674-03976-6 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y8AjDrIkBG4C&pg=PA532 | access-date=23 November 2023 | page=532}}</ref> However, Deuteronomy 17:17 does state that the king shall not have too many wives.{{efn|{{bibleverse||Deuteronomy|17:17|NIV}}}}<ref> from ].</ref>{{efn-lg|The king's behavior is condemned by Prophet Samuel in {{bibleverse|1|Samuel|8}}.}} | |||
According to Michael Coogan, "olygyny continued to be practiced well into the biblical period, and it is attested among Jews as late as the second century CE."<ref name=coogan>{{cite book|last1=Coogan|first1=Michael|title=God and Sex. What the Bible Really Says|url=https://archive.org/details/godsexwhatbi00coog|url-access=registration|access-date=May 5, 2011|edition=1st|date=October 2010|publisher=Twelve. Hachette Book Group|location=New York, Boston|isbn=978-0-446-54525-9|page=}}</ref> The incidence was limited, however, and it was likely largely restricted to the wealthy.<ref>du Plessis, I. (1998). "The social and economic life of the Jewish people in Palestine in the time of the New Testament", In A. du Toit (ed.). Vol. 2: ''The New Testament Milieu'' (A. du Toit, ed.). Guide to the New Testament. Halfway House: Orion Publishers.</ref> By the first century, both the expense and the practical problems associated with maintaining multiple wives were barriers to the practice, especially for the less wealthy.<ref name="TDONT γυνή">Theological dictionary of the New Testament. 1964– (G. Kittel, G. W. Bromiley & G. Friedrich, ed.) (electronic ed.). Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans. Entry on ''γυνή''</ref> Since the 11th century, ] Jews have followed ]'s ban on polygyny (except in rare circumstances).<ref>.</ref> | |||
Some ] (Middle Eastern) Jewish communities (particularly ] and ]) discontinued polygyny more recently, after they immigrated to countries where it was forbidden or illegal. ] prohibits polygamy by law.<ref>''Penal Law Amendment (Bigamy) Law'', 5719-1959.{{verify source|date=August 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|title=The English Law of Bigamy in a Multi-Confessional Society: The Israel Experience|first=P.|last=Shifman|date=1 January 1978|journal=The American Journal of Comparative Law|volume=26|issue=1|pages=79–89|doi=10.2307/839776|jstor=839776}}</ref> In practice, however, the law is loosely enforced, primarily to avoid interference with ] culture, where polygyny is practiced.<ref>, ''Haaretz''</ref> Pre-existing polygynous unions among ] (or other countries where the practice was not prohibited by their tradition and was not illegal) are not subject to this Israeli law. But Mizrahi Jews are not permitted to enter into new polygamous marriages in Israel. However polygamy may still occur in non-European Jewish communities that exist in countries where it is not forbidden, such as Jewish communities in Yemen and the Arab world. | |||
] have no rules against polygyny, though the practice itself in modern times is rare, and is not found at all among Karaites living in countries where polygamy is against the law. The husband, however, is only allowed to take other wives if he has the means and ability to treat them equally to the primary wife, and even then only if there was no anti-polygamy clause in their marriage contract from either party. Polyandry, on the other hand, is expressly forbidden.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Olszowy-Schlanger |first=Judith |title=Karaite Women |url=https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/karaite-women |quote=While the marriage of a woman to more than one man at a time is forbidden, a Karaite man could in principle have more than one wife provided he could fulfill all his duties towards both women. However, the right of the husband to take a second wife could be restricted through the inclusion of a special anti-polygamy clause in the betrothal or marriage contract. |access-date=7 February 2024}}</ref> | |||
==In nature== | |||
{{Main|Polygyny in animals}} | |||
In zoology the term ''polygyny'' is used for a pattern of mating in which a male animal has more than one female mate in a breeding season.<ref name="dictionary.com">{{cite web |url=http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/polygyny |title=Polygyny|work=dictionary.com|access-date=22 October 2015}}</ref> Males get their mates by defending the females directly or holding resources that the females want and need. This is known as resource defense polygyny and males of the bee species '']'' (also known as the European wool carder bee) exhibit this behavior. Males claim patches of floral plants, ward off conspecific males and other resource competitors, and mate with the multiple females who forage in their territories.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lampert |first1=Kathrin P. |last2=Pasternak |first2=Vanessa |last3=Brand |first3=Philipp |last4=Tollrian |first4=Ralph |last5=Leese |first5=Florian |last6=Eltz |first6=Thomas |title='Late' male sperm precedence in polyandrous wool-carder bees and the evolution of male resource defence in Hymenoptera |journal=Animal Behaviour |date=April 2014 |volume=90 |pages=211–217 |doi=10.1016/j.anbehav.2014.01.034 |s2cid=53157215 }}</ref> Males of many species attract females to their territory by either gathering in a lek or going out in search of dispersed females. In polygyny relationships in animals, the female is the one who provides most of the parental care for the offspring.<ref>Krebs, J. R., and N. B. Davies. An Introduction to Behavioral Ecology. Oxford: Blackwell Scientific Publications, 1989. Print.</ref> | |||
Polygyny in eusocial insects means that some insects living in colonies have not only one queen, but several queens.<ref name="dictionary.com"/> Solitary species of insects take part in this practice in order to maximize their reproductive success of the widely dispersed females, such as the bee species '']''.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Alcock |first1=John |title=Natural Selection and the Mating Systems of Solitary Bees |journal=American Scientist |date=1980 |volume=68 |issue=2 |pages=146–153 |jstor=29773726 |bibcode=1980AmSci..68..146A }}</ref> Insects such as ] use polygyny to reduce inbreeding depression and thus maximize reproductive success. | |||
There is '''primary polygyny''' (several queens join to found a new colony, but after the hatching of the first workers the queens fight each other until only one queen survives and the colony becomes monogynous) and '''secondary polygyny''' (a well-established colony continues to have several queens). | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
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==Notes== | ||
===Explanatory notes=== | |||
* Low, Bobbi S. (1990). Marriage systems and pathogen stress in human societies . ''American Zoologist 30:'' 325‑339. - (Paper reports ] between pathogen stress & polygyny.) | |||
{{notelist-lg}} | |||
* ] A., ] (Paper reports ] ] between polygyny & democracy.) | |||
===Biblical verses=== | |||
==References== | |||
{{Notelist|15em}} | |||
<references /> | |||
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===Sources=== | ||
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* {{cite book |last1=Boserup |first1=Ester |title=Woman's role in economic development |date=1970 |publisher=St. Martin's Press; George Allen & Unwin |location=New York; London |pages=37–52 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/womansroleinecon0000bose/page/44/mode/2up |chapter=The economics of polygamy}} | |||
* | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Little |first1=Kenneth |title=The Mende of Sierra Leone: A West African People in Transition |date=1967 |publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul |location=London |pages=140–162 |orig-date=1951 |chapter=Marriage and 'Friendship' |chapter-url= https://archive.org/details/mendeofsierraleo0000kenn_g1t0/page/140/mode/2up}} | |||
* | |||
{{refend}} | |||
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===Citations=== | |||
* | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Fortunato |first1=Laura |title=Reconstructing the History of Marriage Strategies in Indo-European—Speaking Societies: Monogamy and Polygyny |journal=Human Biology |date=February 2011 |volume=83 |issue=1 |pages=87–105 |id={{Gale|A253224857}} {{Project MUSE|427995}} {{ProQuest|1492604812}} |url=https://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/humbiol/vol83/iss1/6/ |doi=10.3378/027.083.0106 |pmid=21453006 |s2cid=11534896 }} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Korotayev |first1=Andrey |last2=Bondarenko |first2=Dmitri |title=Polygyny and Democracy: A Cross-Cultural Comparison |journal=Cross-Cultural Research |date=May 2000 |volume=34 |issue=2 |pages=190–208 |doi=10.1177/106939710003400205 |s2cid=144142056 }} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Low |first1=Bobbi S. |title=Marriage Systems and Pathogen Stress in Human Societies |journal=American Zoologist |date=May 1990 |volume=30 |issue=2 |pages=325–340 |doi=10.1093/icb/30.2.325 |doi-access=free }} | |||
{{Polygamous marriage}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 14:28, 3 January 2025
Mating system in which the male partner may have multiple partners This article is about polygynous marriage practices. For polygynous animal mating, see Polygyny in animals. Not to be confused with Polygamy or Polyamory.Polygyny (/pəˈlɪdʒɪni/) is a form of polygamy entailing the marriage of a man to several women. The term polygyny is from Neoclassical Greek πολυγυνία (polugunía); from Ancient Greek πολύ (polú) 'many' and γυνή (gunḗ) 'woman, wife'.
Incidence
Polygyny is more widespread in Africa than in any other continent. Some scholars theorize that the slave trade's impact on the male-to-female sex ratio was a key factor in the emergence and fortification of polygynous practices in regions of Africa.
Polygyny is most common in a region known as the "polygamy belt" in West Africa and Central Africa, with the countries estimated to have the highest polygamy prevalence in the world being Burkina Faso, Mali, Gambia, Niger and Nigeria. In the region of sub-Saharan Africa, polygyny is common and deeply rooted in the culture, with 11 percent of the population of sub-Saharan Africa living in such marriages (25 percent of the Muslim population and 3 percent of the Christian population, as of 2019). Polygyny is especially widespread in West Africa, with the countries estimated to have the highest polygyny prevalence in the world as of 2019 being Burkina Faso (36%), Mali (34%) and Gambia (30%). Outside of Africa, the highest prevalence is in Afghanistan, Yemen and Iraq.
Historically, polygyny was partly accepted in ancient Hebrew society, in classical China, and in sporadic traditional Native American, African and Polynesian cultures. In the Indian subcontinent, it was known to have been practiced during ancient times. It was accepted in Ancient Greece, until the Roman Empire and the Catholic Church.
In North America, polygyny is practiced by some Mormon sects, such as the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (FLDS Church).
Polygyny is more common in societies that have the custom of bride price.
Some studies of mitochondrial DNA have shown that there have been more mothers than fathers in the genetic record of the human species, meaning that the proportion of females that have reproduced in each generation has generally been greater than the proportion of men that reproduced. The authors of one 2014 study attributed these findings to widespread polygyny.
Cause and explanation
Augmenting division of labor
Ester Boserup was the first to propose that the high incidence of polygyny in sub-Saharan Africa is rooted in the sexual division of labor in hoe-farming and the large economic contribution of women.
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In some regions of shifting cultivation where polygyny is most frequently recorded, labor is often starkly divided between genders. In many of these cases, the task of felling trees in preparation of new plots, the fencing of fields against wild animals, and sometimes the planting of crops, is usually done by men and older boys (along with hunting, fishing and the raising of livestock). Wives, on the other hand, are responsible for other aspects of cultivating, food processing and providing meals and for performing domestic duties for the family. Boserup notes that though the work completed by women calculates for a larger percentage of the tasks that form the basis of sub-Saharan life, women often do not receive the majority portion of the benefits that accompany economic and agricultural success.
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An elderly cultivator, with several wives and likely several young male children, benefits from having a much larger workforce within his household. By the combined efforts of his young sons and young wives, he may gradually expand his cultivation and become more prosperous. A man with a single wife has less help in cultivation and is likely to have little or no help for felling trees. According to Boserup's historical data, women living in such a structure also welcome one or more co-wives to share with them the burden of daily labor. However, the second wife will usually do the most tiresome work, almost as if she were a servant to the first wife, and will be inferior to the first wife in status. A 1930s study of the Mende in the West African state of Sierra Leone concluded that a plurality of wives is an agricultural asset, since a large number of women makes it unnecessary to employ wage laborers. Polygyny is considered an economic advantage in many rural areas. In some cases, the economic role of the additional wife enables the husband to enjoy more leisure.
Anthropologist Jack Goody's comparative study of marriage around the world, using the Ethnographic Atlas, demonstrated a historical correlation between the practice of extensive shifting cultivation and polygyny in many Sub-Saharan African societies. Drawing on the work of Ester Boserup, Goody notes that in some of the sparsely-populated regions where shifting cultivation takes place in Africa, much of the work is done by women. This favored polygynous marriages, in which men sought to monopolize the production of women "who are valued both as workers and as child bearers."
Goody, however, observes that the correlation is imperfect, and also describes more traditionally male-dominated though relatively extensive farming systems, such as those common in much of West Africa, particularly the savanna region, where more agricultural work is done by men, and polygamy is desired more for the production of male offspring whose labor in farming is valued.
Goody's observation regarding African male farming systems is discussed and supported by anthropologists Douglas R. White and Michael L. Burton in their article, "Causes of Polygyny: Ecology, Economy, Kinship, and Warfare", where the authors note: "Goody (1973) argues against the female contributions hypothesis. He notes Dorjahn's (1959) comparison of East and
West Africa, showing higher female agricultural contributions in East Africa and higher polygyny rates in West Africa, especially in the West African savanna, where one finds especially high male agricultural contributions. Goody says, "The reasons behind polygyny are sexual and reproductive rather than economic and productive" (1973:189), arguing that men marry polygynously to maximize their fertility and to obtain large households containing many young dependent males."
An analysis by James Fenske (2012) found that child mortality and ecologically-related economic shocks had a stronger association with rates of polygamy in Sub-Saharan Africa rather than female agricultural contributions (which are typically relatively small in the West African savanna and Sahel, where polygyny rates are higher), finding that polygyny rates decrease significantly in line with child mortality rates.
Desire for progeny
Most research into the determinants of polygyny has focused on macro-level factors. Widespread polygyny is linked to the kinship groups that share descent from a common ancestor. Polygyny also served as "a dynamic principle of family survival, growth, security, continuity, and prestige", especially as a socially approved mechanism that increases the number of adult workers immediately and the eventual workforce of resident children.
According to scientific studies, the human mating system is considered to be moderately polygynandrous (multiple males and multiple females، all mate with each other), based both on surveys of world populations, and on characteristics of human reproductive physiology.
Economic burden
Scholars have argued that in farming systems where men do most of the agriculture work, a second wife can be an economic burden rather than an asset. In order to feed an additional wife, the husband must either work harder himself or he must hire laborers to do part of the work. In such regions, polygyny is either non-existent or is a luxury which only a small minority of rich farmers can indulge.
A report by the secretariat of the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) quotes: "one of the strongest appeals of polygyny to men in Africa is precisely its economic aspect, for a man with several wives commands more land, can produce more food for his household and can achieve a high status due to the wealth which he can command". In Boserup's 1970 discussion of earlier analyses of polygynous systems, for example that of Little's work of the 1930s, that through the hard work, economic, and agricultural assistance of a man's several wives, a husband could afford to pay the bride price of a new wife and further his access to more land, meanwhile increasing his progeny. According to Boserup, writing in 1970, tribal rules of land tenure were still in force over much of the continent of Africa. In this system, members of a tribe which commands a certain territory had a native right to take land under cultivation for food production, and in many cases, also for the cultivation of cash crops. Under this tenure system, an additional wife is an economic asset that helps the family to expand its production.
The economist Michèle Tertilt concludes that countries that practice polygyny are less economically stable than those that practice monogamy. Polygynous countries usually have a higher fertility rate, fewer savings reserves, and a lower GDP. A 2014 study estimates that fertility would decrease by 40 percent, savings would increase by 70 percent and GDP would increase by 170 percent if polygyny were banned. Monogamous societies present a surge in economic productivity because monogamous men are able to save and invest their resources due to having fewer children. Polygynous societies have a higher concentration of men investing into methods of mating with women, whereas monogamous men invest more into their families and other related institutions.
Despite the expenses of polygynous marriages, a 1995 study suggests that men benefit from marrying multiple wives through the economic and social insurance that kinship ties produce. With a large network of in-laws, these men have the ties they need to compensate for other economic shortages.
Libido
Some analysts have posited that a high libido may be a factor in polygyny, although others have downplayed its significance. The sex drive as a factor in some Asian cultures was sometimes associated with wealthy men and those that were adjunct to an aristocracy, although such libidinal perceptions were at times discarded in favor of seeing polygyny as a factor of traditional life. For example, many sub-Saharan African societies view polygyny as essential to expand their progeny and kinship, a practice of high cultural importance. In this case, it would be hard to determine whether the origin was that of high libido, as polygyny would be practiced regardless. Other explanations postulate that polygyny is a tool used to ward off inclinations towards infidelity. In a chapter comparing Sub-Saharan African polygyny, Boserup (1970) comments that in regions where polygyny is practiced, but for demographic and economic reasons must to be delayed for males until older ages, higher incidences of adultery and prostitution are expected to be present.
Enslavement of women
Researchers have suggested that Vikings may have originally started sailing and raiding due to a need to seek out women from foreign lands. The concept was expressed in the 11th century by historian Dudo of Saint-Quentin in his semi-imaginary History of The Normans. Rich and powerful Viking men tended to have many wives and concubines, and these polygynous relationships might have led to a shortage of eligible women for the average Viking male. Due to this, the average Viking man could have been forced to perform riskier actions to gain wealth and power to be able to find suitable women. Viking men would often buy or capture women and make them into their wives or concubines. The Annals of Ulster states that in 821 the Vikings plundered an Irish village and "carried off a great number of women into captivity".
Polygyny in West Africa, the region of the world where the practice is most common, exists in a societal context where historical factors, such as the slave trade, and the local religion, Islam, interact creating a culture where polygyny is widespread. The slave trade's impact on the male-to-female sex ratio has been cited as a key factor in the high prevalence of polygynous practices in this region of Africa.
Findings
See also: List of sovereign states by sex ratioOf the 1,231 societies listed in the 1980 Ethnographic Atlas, 186 were found to be monogamous; 453 had occasional polygyny; 588 had more frequent polygyny; and 4 had polyandry. Some research has shown that males living in polygynous marriages may live 12 percent longer. Polygyny may be practiced where there is a lower male:female ratio; this may result from male infants having increased mortality from infectious diseases. However, the natural sex ratio at birth is actually slightly biased in favour of males (the natural sex ratio is around 105 boys/100 girls at birth; generally in the range of 103–107); presently in some countries this is even more biased in favor of males due to sex-selective abortion and female infanticide.
Violence
Research shows that polygyny is widely practiced in countries that are destabilized, more violent, more likely to invade neighbors and more likely to fail. This has been attributed to the inequality factor of polygyny, where if the richest and most powerful 10 percent of males have four wives each, the bottom thirty percent of males cannot marry. In the top twenty countries in the 2017 Fragile States Index, polygyny is widely practiced. In West Africa, more than one-third of women are married to a man who has more than one wife, and a study of 240,000 children in 29 African countries has also shown that, after controlling for other factors, children in polygynous families were more likely to die young. A 2019 study of 800 rural African ethnic groups published in the Journal of Conflict Resolution found that "young men who belong to polygynous groups feel that they are treated more unequally and are readier to use violence in comparison to those belonging to monogamous groups."
In a 2011 doctoral thesis, anthropologist Kyle R. Gibson reviewed three studies documenting 1,208 suicide attacks from 1981 to 2007 and found that countries with higher polygyny rates correlated with greater production of suicide terrorists. Political scientist Robert Pape has found that among Islamic suicide terrorists, 97 percent were unmarried and 84 percent were male (or if excluding the Kurdistan Workers' Party, 91 percent male), while a study conducted by the U.S. military in Iraq in 2008 found that suicide bombers were almost always single men without children aged 18 to 30 (with a mean age of 22), and were typically students or employed in blue-collar occupations. In addition to noting that countries where polygyny is widely practiced tend to have higher homicide rates and rates of rape, political scientists Valerie M. Hudson and Bradley Thayer have argued that because Islam is the only major religious tradition where polygyny is still largely condoned, the higher degrees of marital inequality in Islamic countries than most of the world causes them to have larger populations susceptible to suicide terrorism, and that promises of harems of virgins for martyrdom serves as a mechanism to mitigate in-group conflict within Islamic countries between alpha and non-alpha males by bringing esteem to the latter's families and redirecting their violence towards out-groups.
Along with his research on the Tamil Tigers, anthropologist Scott Atran found that Palestinian terrorist groups (such as Hamas) provide monthly stipends, lump-sum payments, and massive prestige to the families of suicide terrorists. Citing Atran and other anthropological research showing that 99 percent of Palestinian suicide terrorists are male, that 86 percent are unmarried, and that 81 percent have at least six siblings (larger than the average Palestinian family size), cognitive scientist Steven Pinker argues in The Better Angels of Our Nature (2011) that because the families of men in the West Bank and Gaza often cannot afford bride prices and that many potential brides end up in polygynous marriages, the financial compensation of an act of suicide terrorism can buy enough brides for a man's brothers to have children to make the self-sacrifice pay off in terms of kin selection and biological fitness (with Pinker also citing a famous quotation attributed to evolutionary biologist J. B. S. Haldane when Haldane quipped that he would not sacrifice his life for his brother but would for "two brothers or eight cousins").
Effects on women
Inequality between husbands and wives is common in countries where polygyny is more frequently practiced because of limited education. In Africa polygyny was believed to be part of the way to build an empire. It was not until the post-colonialism era in Africa that polygyny began to be viewed as unjust or taboo. According to Natali Exposito, "in a study of the Ngwa Igbo Clan in Nigeria identified five principal reasons for men to maintain more than one wife: because having more than one wife allows the Ngwa husband to (1) have the many children that he desires; (2) heighten his prestige and boost his ego among his peers; (3) enhance his status within the community; (4) ensure a sufficient availability of labor to perform the necessary farm work and the processing of commercial oil-palm produce; and (5) satisfy his sexual urges." Out of all of the reasons stated none are beneficial to the wives, but instead only beneficial to the husbands. In Egypt, feminists have fought for polygamy to be abolished, but it is viewed as a basic human right so the fight has been unsuccessful. In countries where polygyny is practiced less frequently, women have more equality in the marriage and are better able to communicate their opinions about family planning.
Women participating in polygynous marriages share common marital problems with women in a monogamous marriage; however, there are issues uniquely related to polygyny which affects their overall life satisfaction and have severe implications for women's health. Women practicing polygyny are susceptible to sexually transmitted infections, infertility, and mental health complications. Among the Logoli of Kenya, the fear of AIDS or becoming infected with the HIV virus has informed women's decisions about entering polygynous marriages. Some view polygyny as a means to prevent men from taking random sexual partners and potentially introducing STIs into relationships. Interviews conducted with some of the Logoli tribe in Kenya suggested they feared polygynous marriages because of what they have witnessed in the lives of other women who are currently in such relationships. The observed experiences of some of the women in polygynous unions tend to be characterized by frequent jealousy, conflicts, competition, tensions, and psychological stresses. Some of the husbands fail to share love and other resources equally; and envy and hatred, and sometimes violent physical confrontations become the order of the day among co-wives and their children. This discourages women from entering a polygynous marriage. Research shows that competition and conflict can intensify to unbearable level for co-wives causing women to commit suicide due to psychological distress. Findings show that the wife order can affect life satisfaction. According to Bove and Valeggia, women who are senior wives often misuse their position to obtain healthcare benefits in countries where only one wife can become a recipient. The conflict between co-wives can attribute to the higher rates of mental health disorders and issues such as anxiety, depression, somatization, psychoticism, and paranoia. As well as this reduced marital/life satisfaction and low self-esteem has been shown to be more prevalent among women in polygynous relationships when compared to women in monogamous relationships.
Various methods have been used to reduce the amount of jealousy and conflict among wives. These include sororal polygyny, in which the co-wives are sisters; and hut polygyny, in which each wife has her own residence and the husband visits them in rotation. A clear status hierarchy among wives is also sometimes used to avoid fighting by establishing unequivocally each wife's rights and obligations. Although there are several harmful aspects of this practice related to women, there are some reported personal and economic advantages for women such as sharing household and child rearing responsibilities. Also, wives share companionship and support with co-wives.
Studies of the Ngwa group in eastern Nigeria shows that on average, women in polygynous unions are 22–26 percent less fertile than women in monogamous unions. Data shows that the greater the intensity of polygyny, the lower the fertility of successive wives: 15 percent deficit for first wives; a 37 percent deficit for second wives; and a 46 percent deficit for third or more wives. Studies show that seems to exist because of the widening age gap between the successive order of wives and because of the decreasing exposure to coitus, if all coitus occurs in marriage.
Disease
Studies show there are two mechanisms that could lead to higher prevalence rates of HIV in men and women who are in polygynous unions: partners in polygynous unions have more extra-marital relationships and thus increase each other's exposure to HIV; women who are recruited into a polygynous union are more likely to be HIV positive than those who marry a monogamous husband. In addition to these two mechanisms, variation in HIV prevalence rates by union type is possibly due to individuals in polygynous unions are typically part of a sexual network with concurrent partnerships.
The ecological association between polygyny and HIV prevalence is shown to be negative at the sub-national level. HIV prevalence tends to be lower in countries where the practice of polygyny is common, and within countries it is lower in areas with higher levels of polygyny. Proposed explanations for the protective effect of polygyny include the distinctive structure of sexual networks produced by polygyny, the disproportionate recruitment of HIV positive women into marriages with a polygynous husband, and the lower coital frequency in conjugal dyads of polygynous marriages.
For example, studies in Malawi have shown that for men and women in polygynous marriages, the rate of HIV is between 10 and 15 percent. About 14 percent of Malawi's population is infected with HIV, which causes AIDS, according to official figures. There are approximately 78,000 AIDS-related deaths and 100,000 new infections every year in the country.
Criticism
Criticism of polygyny focuses on the wellbeing of the wives in such marriages, including coercion, buying and selling of wives (such as through bride price, which is common in societies that practice polygyny), concerns about inequality and the fate of the young men left without wives (such as the lost boys in the FLDS Church), as well as the relation between polygyny practiced on a large scale in a society and war.
A notable critic of polygyny was Thomas Aquinas nearly 8 centuries ago. He contended that polygyny is unjust to wives and children. He also argues that it creates rival stepchildren and forces them to compete for attention, food, and shelter. According to Aquinas, polygyny violates the requirements of fidelity between husband and wife.
Polygyny has been criticized by feminists such as Professor John O. Ifediora, who believes that women should be equal to men and not subject to them in marriage. Professor Ifediora also believes that polygyny is a "hindrance to social and economic development" in the continent of Africa due to women's lack of financial control. Standard polygynist practices often leave women at a disadvantage if they make the decision to remove themselves from the polygynist lifestyle. To leave the marriage, women must repay their bride price. Though this is simple in thought, this is not simple in execution. To prevent their wives from leaving, husbands will often keep the bride price at high levels, which is often at an unpayable level for women. In most cases, women do not have access to their children if they decide to leave polygyny, nor are they allowed to take them, due to cultural ideas of ownership in relation to progeny. Marci Hamilton sees polygyny as a form of oppression of women; she wrote: "In polygamy, also not a victimless crime, the practice is built on the subjugation of women to the men's needs and demands. Moreover, for many of the religious polygamists, the women are nothing but the means to a particular doctrinal end – creating more children to increase the man's odds of getting into heaven. Again, the men control the finances and the women are commodities, carrying out the sexual goals of the men. There can be no gender equality in this scenario, which is incapable of being squared with any viable theory of women's rights." First wives in polygynous marriages are often in a difficult situation, when the law or religious code does not require their consent or input for new wives to be admitted in the marriage, so the first wife is forced to accept any new women brought into the family by the husband and to get along with them. Polygyny is criticized because of its asymmetrical, unequal marital arrangement, where the husband has sexual/romantic relations with several women, but the wives can only have such a relation with one man, their husband, which often leads to rigid gender roles in the marriage.
A criticism against polygyny is that in almost all cultures and religious communities that practice it, polygyny is the only form of polygamy that is allowed; and, as such, this violates modern principles of equality between men and women, especially as in many such places females having multiple partners is violently punished through honor killings and stoning, or discouraged through female genital mutilation. In the United States, there has been controversy surrounding the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints that practices polygyny, after the community has been marred by accusations of child sexual abuse, welfare fraud, and child labor trafficking, that culminated in the life imprisonment of polygynous leader Warren Jeffs.
Premodern era
In Africa, the Americas, and Southeast Asia in the Premodern Era, circa 600 BCE – 1600 CE, both monogamy and polygyny occurred. Polygyny occurred even in areas of where monogamy was prevalent. Wealth played a key role in the development of family life during these times. Wealth meant the more powerful men had a principal wife and several secondary wives, known as resource polygyny. Local rulers of villages usually had the most wives as a sign of power and status. Conquerors of villages would often marry the daughters of the former leaders as a symbol of conquest. The practice of resource polygyny continued with the spread and expansion of Islam in Africa and Southeast Asia. Children born into these households were considered free. Children born to free or slave concubines were free, but had lesser status than those born to wives. Living arrangements varied between areas. In Africa, each wife usually had their own house, as well as property and animals. In many other parts of the world, wives lived together in seclusion, under one household. A harem (also known as a "forbidden area") was a special part of the house for the wives.
By country
Further information: Legality of polygamyAfrica
Kenya
Polygynous marriage was preferred among the Logoli and other Abalulya sub ethnic groups. Taking additional wives was regarded as one of the fundamental indicators of a successfully established man. Large families enhanced the prestige of Logoli men. Logoli men with large families were also capable of obtaining justice, as they would be feared by people, who would not dare to use force to take their livestock or other goods from them. Interviews with some of the contemporary Logoli men and women who recently made polygynous marriages yielded data which suggest that marrying another wife is usually approached with considerable thought and deliberation by the man. It may or may not involve or require the consent of the other wives and prospective wife's parents. A type of "surrogate pregnancy" arrangement was reported to have been observed, in which some wives who are unable to bear children, find fulfillment in the children and family provided by a husband taking additional wives. Some of the men indicated that they were pressured by their parents to marry another wife, who could contribute additional income to the family. Some of the young polygynous men indicated that they were trapped in polygyny because of the large number of single women who needed and were willing to take them as husbands although they were already married. Most of those second and third wives were older women who had not yet married.
Nigeria
Customary law, one of the three legal systems in operation in Nigeria (the other two being Nigerian common law and Sharia law) allows for one man to legally marry more than one woman.
Unlike those marriages recognized by Sharia, there is no limit to the number of legal wives allowed under customary law. Currently polygyny is most common within royal and noble families within the country, and is largely practiced by the tribes native to its north and west. Although far less popular there, it is nonetheless also legal in Nigeria's east and south.
Polygyny varies according to a woman's age, religion and educational experience. Research conducted in the city of Ibadan, the second largest city in Nigeria, shows that non-educated women are significantly more likely (58%) to be in a polygynous union compared to college educated women (4%). Followers of traditional African religions are expected to have as many wives as they can afford. Muslim men are allowed up to 4 wives and only if they can be provided for and treated equally. Christians are typically (and expected to be) monogamous.
Among the Ngwa group in Eastern Nigeria, studies show that 70% of polygynous marriages consist of illiterate men and women, compared to 53% in monogamous marriages.
Malawi
While polygynous marriages are not legally recognized under the civil marriage laws of Malawi, customary law affords a generous amount of benefits to polygynous unions, ranging from inheritance rights to child custody. It has been estimated that nearly one in five women in Malawi live in polygynous relationships.
Efforts to abolish the practice and de facto recognition of polygyny have been widely apparent throughout the recent years in Malawi; led mainly by anti-AIDS organizations and feminist groups. An effort led in 2008 to outlaw polygyny in the country was fiercely opposed by Islamic religious leaders, citing the practice as a cultural, religious and pragmatic reality of the nation.
South Africa
Main article: Polygamy in South AfricaPolygynous marriages are legal under certain circumstances in South Africa. All polygynous marriages entered into in accordance with the provisions of the Recognition of Customary Marriages Act are legal. Polygyny in South Africa is practiced among the indigenous Bantu ethnic groups of South Africa, and also within the Muslim community. Although it was widespread in ancient times, it is now only common amongst richer men and men of status, such as chiefs and kings, including the former President of the Republic of South Africa, Jacob Zuma. Polygynous marriages of individuals over the age of 15 accounts for approximately 30,000 (0.1%) people in 2001. Both Islamic law and cultural family laws create a system in which Muslim men are encouraged to take up to four wives. Several factors for this include infertility or long-term illness of the first wife, excessive wealth on the part of the husband enabling him to support widowed or divorced mothers, and the economic benefits of large families.
Despite the historical and cultural history of polygyny among Muslim South Africans, polygynous unions are officially illegal on the national level in South Africa. After 1994, various laws such as the freedom of religion in the South African Constitution, the ratification of the UN's Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women and a proposed Draft Bill on Muslim Marriages have tackled the issue of Islamic polygynous unions in South Africa.
Somalia
Polygyny is legal in Somalia and most commonly seen throughout Muslim communities. According to the Muslim tradition, men can have up to four wives. For a man to gain additional wives in Somalia, it must be granted by the court and it has to be proven that the first wife is either imprisoned or infertile.
Mozambique
Further information: Polygamy in MozambiqueMozambique prohibits legal recognition of polygamous unions, yet there are no legal restrictions against the practice itself, which has been reported to be quite widespread in the coastal country. As of 2019, it was estimated that about nearly 20% of married women aged 15–49 are in polygynous unions.
Australia
Polygyny is not legal in Australia. The Marriage Act of 1961 under section 94 states that any person who knowingly marries another whose marriage is legally ongoing carries out the act of bigamy. The penalty of bigamy is up to five years of imprisonment. The Full Court of the Family Court of Australia ruled on March 6, 2016, that it is illegal to have polygamous marriages. However, foreign marriages that have potential to be polygamous when it was started will be legally recognized in Australia. The court defined a potentially polygamous marriage as if the marriage is not yet polygamous, but if the country where the marriage marginally taken place permits polygamous marriages of either partner to the original marriage at a later date. Indigenous populations of Australia have been noted to engage in polygamous relationships.
Asia
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Many majority-Muslim countries retain the traditional sharia, which interprets teachings of the Quran to permit polygamy with up to four wives. Exceptions to this include Albania, Tunisia, Turkey, and former USSR republics. Though about 70% of the population of Albania is historically Muslim, the majority is non-practicing. Turkey and Tunisia are countries with overwhelmingly Muslim populations that enforce secularist practices by law. In the former USSR republics, a prohibition against polygamy has been inherited from Soviet Law. In the 21st century, a revival of the practice of polygamy in the Muslim World has contributed to efforts to re-establish its legality and legitimacy in some countries and communities where it is illegal.
Proposals have been made to re-legalize polygamy in other ex-Soviet Muslim republics, such as Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan.
The original wife (or legal wife) was referred to as the 正室 zhèngshì /정실 (main room) both in China, Japan and Korea. 大婆 dàpó ("big woman/big wife") is the slang term. Both terms indicate the orthodox nature and hierarchy. The official wife was called "big mother" (大媽 dàmā), mother or aunt. The child of the concubine addressed the big mother as "aunt".
The written word for the second woman was 側室 cèshì /측실 and literally means "she who occupied the side room". This word was also used in both Korea and Japan. They were also called 妾 qiè/첩 in China and Korea. The common terms referring to the second woman, and the act of having the second woman respectively, are 二奶 (èrnǎi), literally "the second wife".
India
Polygamy in India is, in general, prohibited and the vast majority of marriages are legally monogamous. Polygyny among Christians was banned in the late 19th century, while The Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 banned polygyny for Hindus. Currently, polygyny is only allowed among Muslims; but it is strongly discouraged by public policy. Muslims are subject to the terms of The Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act of 1937, interpreted by the All India Muslim Personal Law Board. Prevalence of polygyny in India is very low: among married women, only 1.68 percent of Hindus, 2.45 percent of Muslims, 2.16 percent of Christians, and 1.16 percent of other religions live in polygynous marriages.
China
See also: Concubinage § ChinaIn mainland China, polygamy is illegal under Civil code passed in 2020. This replaced a similar 1950 and 1980 prohibition.
Polygyny where wives are of equal status had always been illegal in China, and had been considered a crime in some dynasties. In family laws from Tang to Qing Dynasties, the status of a wife, concubines and maid-mistresses could not be altered. However, concubinage was supported by law until the end of the Qing/Ching dynasty of the imperial China (1911). In the past, Emperors could and often did have hundreds to thousands of concubines. Rich officials and merchants of the elite also took concubines in addition to legal wives. The first wife was the head or mother wife; other wives were under her headship if the husband was away. Concubines had a lower status than full wives, generally not being seen in public with their husband and not having rights to decisions in the house. Children from concubines were considered inferior to those of the wife and did not receive equal wealth/legacy from their father. However they were considered legitimate, therefore had many more rights to inheritance of status and wealth than illegitimate children conceived outside a marriage.
Polygamy was de facto widely practiced in the Republic of China from 1911 to 1949, before Kuomintang was defeated in the Civil War and retreated to Taiwan. Zhang Zongchang, a well-known warlord, notably declared he had three 'unknowns' – unknown number of rifles, unknown amount of money, and unknown number of concubines.
Chinese men in Hong Kong could practice concubinage by virtue of the Qing Code. This ended with the passing of the Marriage Reform Ordinance (Cap. 178) in 1970. Kevin Murphy of the International Herald Tribune reported on the cross-border polygamy phenomenon in Hong Kong in 1995. In a research paper of Humboldt University of Berlin on sexology, Doctor Man-Lun Ng estimated about 300,000 men in China have mistresses. In 1995, forty percent of extramarital affairs in Hong Kong involved a stable partner.
Period drama and historical novels frequently refer to the former culture of polygamy (usually polygyny). An example is the Wuxia novel The Deer and the Cauldron by Hong Kong writer Louis Cha, in which the protagonist Wei Xiaobao has seven wives (In a later edition of the novel, Princess Jianning was assigned as the wife, while others are concubines).
Kyrgyzstan
A proposal to decriminalize polygamy was heard by the Kyrgyz parliament. It was supported by the Justice Minister, the country's ombudsman, and the Muslim Women's organization Mutakalim, which had gathered 40,000 signatures in favour of polygamy. But, on March 26, 2007, parliament rejected the bill. President Kurmanbek Bakiyev is known to oppose legalizing polygyny.
Tajikistan
Due to an increase in the number of polygamous marriages, proposals were made in Tajikistan to re-legalize polygamy. Tajik women who want to be second wives particularly support decriminalizing polygyny. Mukhiddin Kabiri, the Deputy Chairman of the Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan, says that legislation is unlikely to stop the growth in polygyny. He criticizes the ruling élite for speaking out against the practice while taking more than one wife themselves.
Yemen
Polygyny is legal in Yemen, a majority Muslim nation, which follows Islamic tradition where polygyny is acceptable up to four wives only if the husband treats all wives justly. Seven percent of married women in Yemen are a part of polygamous relationship. Reports conducted in the country have shown that rural regions are more likely to have polygamous relationships than those in cities or coastal areas.
Europe
Bosnia and Herzegovina
The Muslim communities of Bosnia and Herzegovina traditionally practiced polygamy but the practice was last observed in Cazinska Krajina in the early 1950s. Although illegal in the country, polygamy is encouraged by certain religious circles, and the number of practitioners has increased. This trend appears linked with the advent of fundamentalist Wahhabism in the Balkans.
The Bosniak population in neighbouring Raška, Serbia, has also been influenced by this trend in Bosnia. They have suggested creating an entire Islamic jurisdiction including polygamy, but these proposals have been rejected by Serbia. The top cleric, the Mufti of Novi Pazar, Muamer Zukorlić, has taken a second wife.
Russia
Factual polygamy and sexual relationships with several adult partners are not punishable in accordance with current revisions of Criminal Code of Russia and Code of the Russian Federation on Administrative Offenses. But multiple marriage cannot be registered and officially recognised by Russian authorities because Family Code of Russia (section 14 and others) prohibits registration of marriage if one of person is in another registered marriage in Russia or another country. Polygamy is tolerated in predominantly Muslim republics such as Chechnya, Ingushetia, and Dagestan.
Chechen politician Ramzan Kadyrov actively advocated for polygynous marriage to gain legal recognition. Muslim leaders such as Talgat Tadzhuddin also pushed for the legal recognition of polygynous marriage.
Polygyny was legalized and documented in unrecognised Chechen Republic of Ichkeria but Russian authorities had annulled these polygynous marriages after they regained control over territory of Ichkeria. Later Ramzan Kadyrov, President of the Chechen Republic, has been quoted on radio as saying that the depopulation of Chechnya by war justifies legalizing polygamy. Kadyrov has been supported by Nafigallah Ashirov, the Chairman of the Council of Grand Muftis of Russia, who has said that polygamy is already widespread among Muslim communities of the country.
In Ingushetia in July, 1999 polygyny was officially recognised and allowed by edict of president of Ingushetia Ruslan Aushev and registration of polygyny marriages had been started allowing men to marry up to four wives as it relates to Muslim tradition. But this edict had been formally suspended soon by edict of President of Russia Boris Yeltsin. One year later this edict of Aushev had been cancelled by the Supreme Court of Ingushetia because of contradiction with Family Code of Russia.
Although non-Muslim Russian populations have historically practiced monogamy, Russian politician Vladimir Zhirinovsky offered to legalize polygyny to encourage population growth and correct the demographic crisis of Russians. Zhirinovsky first proposed to legalize polygyny in 1993, after Kadyrov's declaration that he would introduce an amendment to legalize polygyny for all Russian citizens.
Serbia
Serbian Law, which in turn is based on the French Civil Code, permits individuals to only be married monogamously. However, the jurisdiction of the civil law exclusively oversees the marriages conducted in civilian ceremonies, and not those conducted in the religious ones. Given that the law does not require couples to register a religious marriage in the registry of civil marriages (whilst in the neighbouring Bosnia, failing to do so can result in a fine), individuals seeking to practice polygamy are not restricted to do so. One of the best known examples was the chief Mufti of the Islamic Community in Serbia, Dr. Muamer Zukorlic, who was simultaneously married to three women.
United Kingdom
In the UK, there are believed to be up to 20,000 polygamous marriages in Britain's Muslim community, even though bigamy is an offence. All marriages that happen within the United Kingdom must be monogamous and meet the requirements of the relevant legislation to be perceived as legitimately substantial. For polygamous unions in the UK to be viewed as valid, the people must live in a country where a person is allowed to have more than one spouse and get married in a nation that permits it. There is evidence of unregistered polygamous marriages in the UK, performed through religious ceremonies, that are not recognized under UK law. In May 2016, a cross-bench member of the British House of Lords Baroness Cox introduced the Arbitration and Mediation Services (Equality) Bill. This Bill would ensure that individuals in polygamous marriages and religiously recognized marriages not considered legal in the UK are informed that they could be without legal protection if they were caught by authorities.
The Americas
Chile
Further information: Mapuche polygamyPolygyny has a long history among the Mapuche people of southern South America. Wives that share the same husband are often relatives, such as sisters, who live in the same community. Having the same husband does not imply women belong to the same household. Mapuche polygamy has no legal recognition in Chile. This puts women who are not legally married to their husband at disadvantage to any legal wife in terms of securing inheritance. It is thought that present-day polygamy is much less common than it once was, in particularly compared with the time before the Occupation of Araucanía (1861–1883) when Araucanía lost its autonomy. Albeit chiefly rural, Mapuche polygamy has also been reported in the low-income peripheral communes of Santiago.
North America
Further information: Latter Day Saint polygamy in the late-19th centuryPolygyny is illegal in the United States and Canada.
Mormon fundamentalism believes in the validity of selected fundamental aspects of Mormonism as taught and practiced in the nineteenth century. Fundamentalist Latter-Day Saints' teachings include plural marriage, a form of polygyny first taught by Joseph Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement.
In the 21st century, several sources have claimed as many as 60,000 fundamentalist Latter-day Saints in the United States, with fewer than half of them living in polygamous households. Others have suggested that there may be as few as 20,000 Mormon fundamentalists with only 8,000 to 15,000 practicing polygamy. The largest Mormon fundamentalist groups are the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS Church) and the Apostolic United Brethren (AUB). The FLDS Church is estimated to have 10,000 members residing in the sister cities of Hildale, Utah and Colorado City, Arizona; Eldorado, Texas; Westcliffe, Colorado; Mancos, Colorado; Creston and Bountiful, British Columbia; Pringle, South Dakota, and Montana.
Polygyny is also practiced by some Muslim immigrants to the US, especially those from Africa and Asia. NPR's All Things Considered estimated in 2008 that 50,000 to 100,000 American Muslims live in polygamous families.
In July 2022, a Mexican judge in the state of Puebla's Eighth District Civil Court authorized the country's first threesome group marriage.
Religion
Buddhism
Buddhism does not regard marriage as a sacrament – it is a secular affair, and normally Buddhist monks do not participate in it (though in some sects priests do marry). Hence marriage receives no religious sanction. Forms of marriage, in consequence, vary from country to country.
Polygamy in Thailand was legally recognized until 1935. Myanmar outlawed polygyny from 2015. In Sri Lanka, polyandry was legal in the Kingdom of Kandy, but outlawed by British after conquering the kingdom in 1815. When the Buddhist texts were translated into Chinese, the concubines of others were added to the list of inappropriate partners. Polyandry in Tibet was common traditionally, as was polygyny, and having several wives or husbands was never regarded as having sex with inappropriate partners.
The Parabhava Sutta states that "a man who is not satisfied with one woman and seeks out other women is on the path to decline". Other fragments in the Buddhist scripture seem to treat polygamy unfavorably, leading some authors to conclude that Buddhism generally does not approve of it or alternatively regards it as a tolerated, but subordinate, marital model.
Christianity
Main article: Polygamy in ChristianityPolygamy is not forbidden in the Old Testament. The New Testament is largely silent on polygamy, however, some point to Jesus's repetition of the earlier scriptures, noting that a man and a wife "shall become one flesh". However, some look to Paul's writings to the Corinthians: "Do you not know that he who is joined to a prostitute becomes one body with her? For, as it is written, 'The two will become one flesh.'" Supporters of polygamy argue this use of the phrase in relation to prostitution in this verse, means "becoming one flesh" refers to a merely physical, rather than spiritual, union, even when it is used about marriage in other verses.
Most Christian theologians argue that in Matthew 19:3–9 and referring to Genesis 2:24, Jesus explicitly states a man should have only one wife:
Have ye not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female, And said, For this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife: and they twain shall be one flesh?
— Matthew 19:3–9
In the New Testament, scriptures state that polygamy should not be practiced by certain church leaders. 1 Timothy says that certain Church leaders should have but one wife: "A bishop then must be blameless, the husband of one wife (Koinē Greek: mias gunaikos andra, lit. 'one-woman man'), vigilant, sober, of good behavior, given to hospitality, apt to teach". Verse 12 has similar advice regarding deacons having only one wife. Similar counsel is repeated in the first chapter of the Epistle to Titus.
Periodically, Christian reform movements that have aimed at rebuilding Christian doctrine based on the Bible alone (sola scriptura) have at least temporarily accepted polygyny as a Biblical practice. For example, during the Protestant Reformation, in a document referred to simply as Der Beichtrat (or The Confessional Advice ), Martin Luther, whose reformation caused a schism in the Western Christian Church leading to the formation of the Lutheran Church, granted the Landgrave Philip of Hesse, who, for many years, had been living "constantly in a state of adultery and fornication", a dispensation to take a second wife. The double marriage was to be done in secret, however, to avoid public scandal. Some fifteen years earlier, in a letter to the Saxon Chancellor Gregor Brück, Luther stated that he could not "forbid a person to marry several wives, for it does not contradict Scripture." (Ego sane fateor, me non posse prohibere, si quis plures velit uxores ducere, nec repugnat sacris literis.)
The Lutheran World Federation hosted a regional conference in Africa, in which the acceptance of polygynists and their wives into full membership by the Lutheran Church in Liberia was defended as being permissible. The Lutheran Church in Liberia, while permitting men to retain their wives from marriages prior to being received into the Church, does not permit polygynists who have become Christians to marry more wives after they have received the sacrament of Holy Baptism. Evangelical Lutheran missionaries in Maasai also tolerate the practice of polygyny and in Southern Sudan, and some polygynists are becoming Lutheran Christians.
On the other hand, the Roman Catholic Church criticizes polygyny in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Under paragraph 2387 of "Other offenses against the dignity of marriage" of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, it states "is not in accord with the moral law". Additionally, paragraph 1645 of "The Goods and Requirements of Conjugal Love" states "The unity of marriage, distinctly recognized by our Lord, is made clear in the equal personal dignity which must be accorded to husband and wife in mutual and unreserved affection. Polygamy is contrary to conjugal love which is undivided and exclusive." There are small numbers of Roman Catholic theologians that claim polygyny can be an authentic form of marriage in certain regions such as Africa.
In Sub-Saharan Africa, there has often been a tension between the Western Christian insistence on monogamy and the traditional practice of polygamy. In some instances in recent times there have been moves for accommodation; in other instances, churches have resisted such moves strongly. African Independent Churches have sometimes referred to those parts of the Old Testament that describe polygamy in defending the practice.
Hinduism
The Hindu scriptures acknowledge numerous occasions of polygyny; it was the norm among kings, the nobility and the extremely wealthy. For instance Pandu, the father of the Pandavas in Mahabharata, had two wives Kunti and Madri. Similarly, Dashratha had three chief wives: Kausalya, Sumitra, and Kaikeyi. Having more than one wife was a social custom that was believed to increase the prestige of a man. Although many other personalities including Rama had only one wife, as monogamy was regarded as the morally superior type of marriage, polygyny remained customary and widely acceptable among Hindus until it was legally abolished for Hindus in India by the Hindu Marriage Act of 1955.
Islam
Main article: Polygyny in IslamUnder Islamic marital jurisprudence, Muslim men are allowed to practice polygyny, that is, they can have more than one wife at the same time. Muslim men can have up to four wives at a time. Polyandry, the practice of a woman having more than one husband, is not permitted.
Based on verse 30:21 of Quran the ideal relationship is the comfort that a couple find in each other's embrace:
And one of His signs is that He created for you spouses from among yourselves so that you may find comfort in them. And He has placed between you compassion and mercy. Surely in this are signs for people who reflect.
— Surah Ar-Rum 30:21
Polygyny is allowed in the Quran but if a man fears he cannot deal justly with them he should only marry one. This is based on verse 4:3 of Quran which says:
If you fear you might fail to give orphan women their ˹due˺ rights ˹if you were to marry them˺, then marry other women of your choice—two, three, or four. But if you are afraid you will fail to maintain justice, then ˹content yourselves with˺ one or those ˹bondwomen˺ in your possession. This way you are less likely to commit injustice.
— Surah An-Nisa 4:3
There are strict requirements to marrying more than one woman, as the man must treat them equally financially and in terms of support given to each wife, according to Islamic law.
Muslim women are not allowed to marry more than one husband at once. However, in the case of a divorce or their husbands' death they can remarry after the completion of Iddah, as divorce is legal in Islamic law. A non-Muslim woman who flees from her non-Muslim husband and accepts Islam can remarry without divorce from her previous husband, as her marriage with non-Muslim husband is Islamically dissolved on her fleeing. A non-Muslim woman captured during war by Muslims, can also remarry, as her marriage with her non-Muslim husband is Islamically dissolved at capture by Muslim soldiers. This permission is given to such women in verse 4:24 of Quran. The verse also emphasizes transparency, mutual agreement and financial compensation as prerequisites for matrimonial relationship as opposed to prostitution; it says:
Also ˹forbidden are˺ married women—except ˹female˺ captives in your possession. This is God's commandment to you. Lawful to you are all beyond these—as long as you seek them with your wealth in a legal marriage, not in fornication. Give those you have consummated marriage with their due dowries. It is permissible to be mutually gracious regarding the set dowry. Surely God is All-Knowing, All-Wise.
— Surah An-Nisa 4:24
Muhammad was monogamously married to Khadija, his first wife, for 25 years, until she died. After her death, he married multiple women, mostly widows, for social and political reasons. He had a total of nine wives, but not all at the same time, depending on the sources in his lifetime. The Qur'an does not give preference in marrying more than one wife. One reason cited for polygyny is that it allows a man to give financial protection to multiple women, who might otherwise not have any support (e.g. widows). However, the wife can set a condition, in the marriage contract, that the husband cannot marry another woman during their marriage. In such a case, the husband cannot marry another woman as long as he is married to his wife. According to traditional Islamic law, each of those wives keeps their property and assets separate; and are paid mahar and maintenance separately by their husband. Usually the wives have little to no contact with each other and lead separate, individual lives in their own houses, and sometimes in different cities, though they all share the same husband.
In most Muslim-majority countries, polygyny is legal with Kuwait being the only one where no restrictions are imposed on it. The practice is illegal in Muslim-majority Turkey, Tunisia, Albania, Kosovo and Central Asian countries.
Countries that allow polygyny typically also require a man to obtain permission from his previous wives before marrying another; they may require the man to prove that he can financially support multiple wives. In Malaysia and Morocco, a man must justify taking an additional wife at a court hearing before he is allowed to do so. In Sudan, the government encouraged polygyny in 2001 to increase the population.
Judaism
See also: Pilegesh and Polygamy § JudaismPolygyny is not forbidden in the Tanakh and over 40 important figures had more than one wife, such as Esau, Elkanah, and Solomon. Moses had two or three wives; Zipporah, the daughter of Hobab and the "Cushite" woman, even though some Bible interpreters dispute this. However, Deuteronomy 17:17 does state that the king shall not have too many wives.
According to Michael Coogan, "olygyny continued to be practiced well into the biblical period, and it is attested among Jews as late as the second century CE." The incidence was limited, however, and it was likely largely restricted to the wealthy. By the first century, both the expense and the practical problems associated with maintaining multiple wives were barriers to the practice, especially for the less wealthy. Since the 11th century, Ashkenazi Jews have followed Gershom ben Judah's ban on polygyny (except in rare circumstances).
Some Mizrahi (Middle Eastern) Jewish communities (particularly Yemenite Jews and Persian Jews) discontinued polygyny more recently, after they immigrated to countries where it was forbidden or illegal. Israel prohibits polygamy by law. In practice, however, the law is loosely enforced, primarily to avoid interference with Bedouin culture, where polygyny is practiced. Pre-existing polygynous unions among Jews from Arab countries (or other countries where the practice was not prohibited by their tradition and was not illegal) are not subject to this Israeli law. But Mizrahi Jews are not permitted to enter into new polygamous marriages in Israel. However polygamy may still occur in non-European Jewish communities that exist in countries where it is not forbidden, such as Jewish communities in Yemen and the Arab world.
Karaite Jews have no rules against polygyny, though the practice itself in modern times is rare, and is not found at all among Karaites living in countries where polygamy is against the law. The husband, however, is only allowed to take other wives if he has the means and ability to treat them equally to the primary wife, and even then only if there was no anti-polygamy clause in their marriage contract from either party. Polyandry, on the other hand, is expressly forbidden.
In nature
Main article: Polygyny in animalsIn zoology the term polygyny is used for a pattern of mating in which a male animal has more than one female mate in a breeding season. Males get their mates by defending the females directly or holding resources that the females want and need. This is known as resource defense polygyny and males of the bee species Anthidium manicatum (also known as the European wool carder bee) exhibit this behavior. Males claim patches of floral plants, ward off conspecific males and other resource competitors, and mate with the multiple females who forage in their territories. Males of many species attract females to their territory by either gathering in a lek or going out in search of dispersed females. In polygyny relationships in animals, the female is the one who provides most of the parental care for the offspring.
Polygyny in eusocial insects means that some insects living in colonies have not only one queen, but several queens. Solitary species of insects take part in this practice in order to maximize their reproductive success of the widely dispersed females, such as the bee species Anthidium maculosum. Insects such as red flour beetles use polygyny to reduce inbreeding depression and thus maximize reproductive success.
There is primary polygyny (several queens join to found a new colony, but after the hatching of the first workers the queens fight each other until only one queen survives and the colony becomes monogynous) and secondary polygyny (a well-established colony continues to have several queens).
See also
- Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam
- Concubinage
- Cuckold
- Cuckquean
- Legal status of polygamy
- Monogamy
- Mormonism and polygamy
- Plaçage
- Polyandry
- Polygamy
- Polygamy in Christianity
- Polygyny in Islam
- Polygyny threshold model
- Unicorn hunting
- Zephaniah Kingsley
Notes
Explanatory notes
- The digital Nestle-Aland lists only one manuscript (p. 46) as source of the verse, while nine other manuscripts have no such verse, cf. University of Münster Institute for New Testament Textual Research: Transcripts
- Translated as the Ethiopian woman in the Authorised Version. Numbers 12: 1
- The king's behavior is condemned by Prophet Samuel in 1 Samuel 8.
Biblical verses
- Genesis 2:24, Matthew 19:3–6
- 1 Corinthians 6:16
- Genesis 2:24
- Matthew 19:3–9
- 1 Timothy 3:2–12
- Genesis 26:3428:6–9
- 1 Samuel 1:1–8
- 1 Kings 11:1–3
- Exodus 2: 21
- Numbers 10: 291
- Numbers 12: 1
- Deuteronomy 17:17
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Further reading
- Fortunato, Laura (February 2011). "Reconstructing the History of Marriage Strategies in Indo-European—Speaking Societies: Monogamy and Polygyny". Human Biology. 83 (1): 87–105. doi:10.3378/027.083.0106. PMID 21453006. S2CID 11534896. Gale A253224857 Project MUSE 427995 ProQuest 1492604812.
- Korotayev, Andrey; Bondarenko, Dmitri (May 2000). "Polygyny and Democracy: A Cross-Cultural Comparison". Cross-Cultural Research. 34 (2): 190–208. doi:10.1177/106939710003400205. S2CID 144142056.
- Low, Bobbi S. (May 1990). "Marriage Systems and Pathogen Stress in Human Societies". American Zoologist. 30 (2): 325–340. doi:10.1093/icb/30.2.325.
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