Logan Enid Lynette
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.
J Fam Hist. 2011;36(1):52-71. doi: 10.1177/0363199010389546.
This article examines the practice of marriage among whites, "mestizos," blacks, Cubans, and Spaniards during the first constitutional era, focusing upon the reported ages of brides and grooms. The study consists of a quantitative examination of trends found in the records of 900 Catholic marriages celebrated in Havana during the opening decades of independence. The first major finding of the research is that according to most major indicators of status, age was negatively correlated with rank. Thus, contrary to the conclusions of studies conducted in many other contexts, those in the highest strata of society married young. Furthermore, very significant differences were detected in the marital patterns of those identified as mixed-race and those labeled as black. This finding offers empirical weight to the notion that the early-mid twentieth-century Cuban racial structure would best be characterized as tripartite, rather than binary in nature.
本文考察了第一个宪法时代白人、“混血儿”、黑人、古巴人和西班牙人的婚姻习俗,重点关注新郎和新娘的申报年龄。该研究包括对独立初期在哈瓦那举行的900场天主教婚姻记录中发现的趋势进行定量分析。该研究的第一个主要发现是,根据大多数主要地位指标,年龄与社会等级呈负相关。因此,与在许多其他背景下进行的研究结论相反,社会最高阶层的人结婚较早。此外,在被认定为混血儿和被标记为黑人的人群的婚姻模式中发现了非常显著的差异。这一发现为20世纪初中期古巴的种族结构最好被描述为三元结构而非二元结构这一观点提供了实证依据。