The Beauty and the Beast – smallpox and marriage in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Sweden

Abstract: The present study shows that physical attraction played an important role for marriage. Pockmarked persons married about two years later than persons without disfigured faces. Pockmarked men experienced similar disadvantages to women at the marriage market. It is the birth cohorts between the last decades of the eighteenth century and the first decades of the nineteenth century that are of most interest for the study. During the period when these cohorts were acting at the marriage market there was a fairly equal balance between persons who had a previous experience of smallpox and persons without facial pockmarks. This - historically unique - situation created a marriage pattern where previously infected persons married much later than 'healthy'. Pockmarked persons also faced a considerably greater risk of never marrying and when they did so, they almost always chose a partner with a similar experience of smallpox. Correspondingly 'healthy' persons chose to marry each other

Location
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main
Extent
Online-Ressource
Language
Englisch

Bibliographic citation
The Beauty and the Beast – smallpox and marriage in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Sweden ; volume:28 ; number:3 ; year:2003 ; pages:141-161
Veröffentlichungsversion
begutachtet (peer reviewed)
Historical social research ; 28, Heft 3 (2003), 141-161

Classification
Geschichte

Creator
Sköld, Peter

DOI
10.12759/hsr.28.2003.3.141-161
URN
urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-50602
Rights
Open Access; Open Access; Der Zugriff auf das Objekt ist unbeschränkt möglich.
Last update
14.08.2025, 10:47 AM CEST

Data provider

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Associated

  • Sköld, Peter

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