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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: COR-CRE |
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COUVADE (literally a "brooding," from Fr. couver, to hatch, Lat. cubare, to lie down) , a custom so called in Beam, prevalent among several peoples in different parts of the world, requiring that the father, at and sometimes before the birth
recent
it in the little island of Marken in the Zuyder Zee. Even in rural England, notably in East Anglia, a curiously obstinate belief survives (the prevalence of which in earlier times is proved by references to it in Elizabethan drama) that the pregnancy of the woman affects the man, and the young husband who complains of a toothache is assailed by pleasantries as to his wife's condition. In Guiana the custom is.observed in its most typical form. The woman works to within a few hours of the birth
work
work
touch no weapons, is forbidden all meat and food, except at first a fermented liquor and after the twelfth day a weak gruel of cassava meal
wash
Mexico
No certain explanation can be offered for the custom. The most reasonable view is that adopted by E. B. Tylor, who traces in it the transition from the earlier matriarchal to the later patriarchal system of tribe-organization. Among primitive tribes, and probably in all ages, the former order of society, in which descent and inheritance are reckoned through the mother alone, as being the earliest form of family life, is and was very common, if not universal. The acknowledgment of a relation-ship between father and son is characteristic of the progress of society towards a true family life. It may well be that the Couvade arose in the father's desire to emphasize the bond of blood between himself and his child. It is a fact that in some countries the father has to purchase the child from its mother; and in the Roman ceremony of the husband raising the baby from the floor we may trace the savage idea that the male parent must formally proclaim his adoption of and responsibility for the offspring. Max Miller., in his Chips from a German Workshop, endeavoured to find an explanation in primitive "henpecking," asserting that the unfortunate husband was tyrannized over by " his female relatives and afterwards frightened into superstition," that, in fact, the whole fabric of ceremony is reared on nothing but masculine hysteria; but this theory can scarcely be taken seriously. The missionary, Joseph Francois Lafitau, suspected a psychological reason, assuming the custom to be a dim recollection of original
AIITEORITIlLs.--E. B. Tylor's Early History of Man (1865; 2nded. p. 301); F. Max Muller, Chips from a German Workshop (1868-1875), ii. 281; Lord Avebury, Origin of Civilisation (19o0) ; Brett's Indian Tribes of Guiana; Johann Baptist von Spix and Karl F. P. von Martins, Travels in Brazil (1823-1831), ii. 281; F. Lafitau, Mteurs des sauvages americains (1st ed., 1724) ; W. Z. Ripley, Races of Europe (1900); A. H. Keane's Ethnology (1896), p. 368 and footnote; A. Giraud-Teulon, Les Origines du mariage et de la famille (Paris, 1884). End of Article: COUVADE (literally a "brooding," from Fr. couver, to hatch, Lat. cubare, to lie down) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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