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Marriage of foundlings in Lyon
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Marriage of foundlings in Lyon

Guy Brunet     (Centre d’Etudes Démographiques, Institut des Sciences de l’Homme, France)
Alain Bideau (CNRS,
Université Lion 2, France )

"Toward social insertion ? The marriage of foundlings in the city of Lyons (France) during the nineteenth century."

Among the huge number of abandoned children (around 3 millions in France between 1750 and 1800), a large part reached adulthood, but only some had access to marriage. In the European traditional societies, marriage was an essential step to found a family, and it can be considered as an indicator of social integration.

In this paper, we looked for all marriages, recorded in the city of Lyons (the second French town by the number of its inhabitants), including a former foundling. Thus, we can describe   the patterns of marriage of foundlings : sex, age, professional occupation, geographic mobility before marriage. We also can observe, on the same criteria, their spouses who, with very few exceptions, all are legitimate-born. Since we constituted a control sample with the same number of marriages between two legitimate-born spouses, we can notice potential differences between the spouses of former abandoned children and the general population.

 

 

 

Convenor: Alexandre AVDEEV
avdeev@ined.fr and avdeev@ns.econ.msu.ru
Centre for population studies, Faculty of economics, Moscow State University, 119899, MGU, Vorobievy Gory, Moscow, RUSSIA

This page was upgrated  22/11/2000