Talk:Concubinage/Archive 2
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Archive 1 | Archive 2 |
Recent changes
The recent mass removal of content by Grufo,[1] is now starting to border WP:VANDALISM. Without seeking consensus Grufo deleted 40% of the article! (This revision is 81,544 bytes, and Grufo removes 7,646+19,725+5,479 bytes = 32,800 bytes). Blanking massive amounts of the article without consensus is very WP:DISRUPTIVE.VR talk 18:36, 23 September 2020 (UTC)
- Nonsense. Before your first intervention on this page one month ago the article measured 61 481 bytes. Now it measures 55 774 bytes. Moreover:
- This is only a start of re-ordering. And for being a "start" only 5 707 bytes smaller than how the article was one month ago, it is quite a bloated start already
- Everything has been moved to more appropriate sections – no text has been erased; the total quantity of information possessed by Wikipedia on this topic is much larger now than one month ago
- Despite this is only a start, it looks already much much better than before
- --Grufo (talk) 18:52, 23 September 2020 (UTC)
- If anyone takes a look at the history of the article, they will know that Grufo has removed 7,646+19,725+5,479 bytes ~ 32,800 bytes worth of content from an article that was ~ 81,000 bytes before that removal. That's a 40% removal, and they have not bothered to seek consensus before removing all that.VR talk 18:54, 23 September 2020 (UTC)
- Maybe. Hopefully they will look at this talk page at that point and express their opinion. --Grufo (talk) 19:02, 23 September 2020 (UTC)
- The mass removal has transformed the article into a collection of stub paragraphs, each with an instruction to see another article. It resembles a what you get if you do a search on Google with a little bit about each search result. Wikipedia:Be bold suggests that users should be bold when updating the encyclopaedia, but should not be upset when their bold edits get reverted. Well the mass removal needs reverting.-- Toddy1 (talk) 20:19, 23 September 2020 (UTC)
- Maybe. Hopefully they will look at this talk page at that point and express their opinion. --Grufo (talk) 19:02, 23 September 2020 (UTC)
- If anyone takes a look at the history of the article, they will know that Grufo has removed 7,646+19,725+5,479 bytes ~ 32,800 bytes worth of content from an article that was ~ 81,000 bytes before that removal. That's a 40% removal, and they have not bothered to seek consensus before removing all that.VR talk 18:54, 23 September 2020 (UTC)
- This conversation escalated quickly so a few belated points directed towards Grufo.
- The free to slave concubinage ratio could vary considerably and I don't think you can cut it this way especially without any sources. Previously, you moved the Greek concubinage to the slavery section since most Greek concubines were slaves but the source mentions that a few were free born concubines from poor families or foreign regions, invalidating the criteria you mentioned above (only slave concubines in this section). The ancient Judiasm section also mentions abducted women some of whom were enslaved. This whole slave vs free concubines distinction is really tangeial to the topic and a chronological overview of the subject.
- Overall, I think you're being rather idological here with a pro-Roman bias and a desire to anarchonistically connect Roman concubinage to modern day LGBT and other civil unions (the sources don't make this connection as far as I can tell). As mentioned in a comment above there is no need to privelege Roman law when the entire institution predates them as noted in the article. Furthermore the entire concept of Roman marriage had mythical precedents like the abduction of Sabine women which hardly allows us to classify marriage let alone concubinage as always voluntary, in the case of Rome. The strong distinctions regarding sexual slavery vs concubinage, you wish to make don't seem substantiated in the sources. VR gave a different possible distinction between the two here [2]
- There is also no evidence that the reason the The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History does "not even mention Islam for example" is because of considerations of what it considers "pure sexual slavery". More likely its because of its lack of notability of the overall topic and we even we have a harem painting there (according to you "concubines" couldn't be included in harems). Why is it there?
- Furthermore the distinctions made by the encyclopaedia that you want us to note are specific to the 21st century (not Rome where it notes that there is much confusion in the laws, though you don't seem to think so) and it makes this clear when it begins with in 21st century parlance "concubine" refers to.... Otherwise the historical definition of concubinage can be found on pg 467. You seem to be arguing against what the source classifies as the "essential characteristic of concubinage" and which also mentions that:
- "in Royal or imperial households, concubines could number into the thousands. Though their duty was to provide sexual pleasure and sons to the male head of the household, they also served as status markers" (note: concubines not sex slaves)
- If quotes like this don't convince you that your denials of what constitutes bona fide concubinage are unfounded, I don't know what will.
- For what it's worth, I think there should be a separate section for concubinage in the modern day but that would be the only instance of what we can (and what the women's encycopaedia) describes as "voluntary concubinage". Another article on concubinage (not sexual slavery [3]) in China would be acceptable as well. So too would one on Islam which VR is working on. That wouldn't be an excuse to just copy paste, shift or even remove information from various sections though.Ronakhtalk (talk) 06:39, 24 September 2020 (UTC)
- I really don't have time for editors who intervene on the pages destroying days of work without even reading a discussion (Toddy1). I am done now with this page. If you all like it like this, be it.
- @Ronakhtalk:
- “The free to slave concubinage ratio could vary considerably”
- How many persons during any of the empires described here could afford “an harem of slaves”? Most cases of concubinage have always been cases of non-married monogamous non-rich couples, who for various reasons could not marry, simply because not many people could afford anything different than that.
- “Greek concubinage to the slavery section”
- Greek concubinage was absolutely not only with slaves. If I am not wrong most pallakai were free non-rich girls or foreigners, but whoever wrote the Wikipedia paragraph emphasized the slavery aspect, so I moved the paragraph under the slavery section. This would not have been the final result. As I had already explained to Vice regent,
the ideal for the situations where a quasi-marital relationship was possible with both slaves and free citizens would be to distinguish the two cases as it is currently the situation for ancient Rome. For example, this could be done with ancient Greece too, presenting the pallake first, and dwelling in the appropriate paragraph on the slave-pallake in the (few? many?) cases where she was a slave.
- Greek concubinage was absolutely not only with slaves. If I am not wrong most pallakai were free non-rich girls or foreigners, but whoever wrote the Wikipedia paragraph emphasized the slavery aspect, so I moved the paragraph under the slavery section. This would not have been the final result. As I had already explained to Vice regent,
- “anarchonistically connect Roman concubinage to modern day LGBT and other civil unions (the sources don't make this connection as far as I can tell)”
- The connection did not happen now. Although LGBT couples are definitely contemporary, the Roman idea of concubinage was already present in the Napoleonic civil code, as a sort of de facto civil union (for heterosexual couples, of course). And it was already in the Napoleonic code because the Roman idea of concubinage has always been around in European countries, since the corpus of the Roman law never really disappeared in the West (see Roman law § In the West). When the French extended concubinage to LGBT couples in 1999, they extended the institution of concubinage as it was in the Napoleonic code.
- --Grufo (talk) 08:07, 24 September 2020 (UTC)
- Please don't make unsubstantiated accusations against Toddy1.
- Are your assertions in accordance with RS? Every source on concubinage I have read seems to say a concubine is a woman who is an unmarried and unequal relationship with a man. It may be that modern same-sex unions use the same word ("concubinage" might simply mean "cohabitation" in some cases), but they don't seem to be the same concept. I could be wrong, so please present your sources.
Greek concubinage was absolutely not only with slaves.
Pretty much the case throughout the world, historically: concubinage could happen with free women or slave women. It may or may not be legal, e.g. Christian clerics engaged in concubinage in contravention of church teachings, but it happened.VR talk 10:20, 24 September 2020 (UTC)- “It may be that modern same-sex unions use the same word”
- Ok, let's revert a bit of concepts:
- Classical meaning of concubinage --> monogamous cohabitation without marriage – of course if a couple did not end up marrying there were often big reasons, like she was a prostitute or he was a half-criminal, etc. You can look up at the municipal laws of cities in the Middle Age and Renaissance for what they meant with "concubinage". It was also often used for priests who found a girlfriend and were living together with her illicitly (since priests could not marry).
- More recent meaning of concubinage --> sex with slaves, polygamy, etc.
- Ok, let's revert a bit of concepts:
- “Every source on concubinage I have read seems to say a concubine is a woman who is an unmarried and unequal relationship with a man”
- A “concubine” is a different thing compared to a “concubinage”. Since historically in most cases a “concubinage” has always meant “an impossible marriage”, often it was because the woman was of an inferior social status than the man. You must keep present that while in other societies there was a “social class” of concubines, this was not the case in Rome. There wasn't “a class” of concubines: a concubine or a "male-concubine" in Rome was simply a person impossible to marry because of too lower social class or because was a freed person. Maybe only in very few cases a concubinatus in Rome was an actual civil union due to free choice (although possibly this happened too). However, since Roman law did not talk about which cases were more suited for a concubinatus instead of a marriage, or how big the social difference needed to be for a concubinatus to be better than a marriage, but talked only abstractly of it as a quasi-marital cohabitation without marriage, the meaning in the law is that of a civil union – and as such is treated in legal contexts.
- “I could be wrong, so please present your sources”
- Paste below what you want that I reference and I will search for a source.
- --Grufo (talk) 12:35, 24 September 2020 (UTC)
- P.S. It is interesting also to click on the “other languages” for this article on Wikipedia and see what they talk about…
- Arabic: معاشرة دون زواج [ Google Translate this page ]
- German: Konkubinat [ Google Translate this page ]
- French: Concubinage [ Google Translate this page ]
- Italian: Concubinato [ Google Translate this page ]
- …
- --Grufo (talk) 13:55, 24 September 2020 (UTC)
- It's entirely possible for words to have a common origin but then diverge in meaning in different languages. An extreme example of that is called "false friend". Google translate of the French article Concubinage translates it as "cohabitation", so perhaps it should link to cohabitation instead.VR talk 20:34, 24 September 2020 (UTC)
- How a false friend? Does concubinage not mean cohabitation in English as well? It is just a less used word here, so it sounds a little bit old fashion; while in French they never stopped using it, so it retained its every-day meaning (that's why Google Translate substituted it). I can assure though that in Italian and German it is as old fashion as it is in English (and that's why Google Translate kept it). --Grufo (talk) 21:42, 24 September 2020 (UTC)
- It's entirely possible for words to have a common origin but then diverge in meaning in different languages. An extreme example of that is called "false friend". Google translate of the French article Concubinage translates it as "cohabitation", so perhaps it should link to cohabitation instead.VR talk 20:34, 24 September 2020 (UTC)
- “It may be that modern same-sex unions use the same word”
Concubinage and cohabitation are different articles. Concubinage seems to have the connotation of inequality between the man and the woman, whereas cohabitation can be egalitarian. Most cultures practicing concubinage also seemed to have accepted polygyny, meaning the concubine would be taken in addition to a wife, whereas cohabitation seems to be monogamous. Rome's emphasis on monogamy seems to be the exception among other cultures that practiced it. This is why the Cambridge Dictionary defines it as a woman who, in some societies, lives and has sex with a man she is not married to, and has a lower social rank than his wife or wives
.VR talk 23:39, 24 September 2020 (UTC)
- “Concubinage seems to have the connotation of inequality between the man and the woman, whereas cohabitation can be egalitarian”
- “Most cultures practicing concubinage also seemed to have accepted polygyny”
- Then they practice polygyny. Concubinage is not related to the number of women or men involved. Actually according to some sources polygyny excludes concubinage (see: [8]).
- “meaning the concubine would be taken in addition to a wife, whereas cohabitation seems to be monogamous”
- Concubinage requires cohabitation, or at least some kind of common life. Without it you are talking about lovers.
- “Rome's emphasis on monogamy seems to be the exception among other cultures that practiced it”
- It is not that Rome invented the term and then this started to mean something else. Rome invented the term, wrote some laws about it, and these laws still survive in both the legal systems and cultural heritage of entire countries. The term has been recently extended to refer to something it would normally not refer to – since the West lacked the vocabulary to describe phenomena that were typical of other cultures. But the term still means quasi-marital cohabitation: without quasi-marital cohabitation you can't even use it.
- “This is why the Cambridge Dictionary defines”
- You keep presenting “concubine”, but I don't know how many times I have to repeat that concubine and concubinage are two different things. Ok, let's do this fast. If you lived in a concubinage in ancient Rome you and your partner would call each other “concubinus”/“concubina”. The Empire wrote laws about it. The Empire fell. People would not call each other concubine anymore. But still concubinage remained in the code (Corpus Juris Civilis), as an institution that survived the entire Middle Age and arrived to our days – with some accidents in between. It was often adopted – especially for not granting inheritance – as much as it was opposed. Maybe just the French in a concubinage today call each other “concubine”. But still the Roman concept of concubinage is alive and well. There are laws about it, churches are still against it calling it with its name. So this is the state today in the English language: “concubine” -> obsolete word, just the Romans used it, and today the French; “concubinage” -> alive and well. For the correct use of the dictionary, see [9], [10], [11], [12], [13].
- --Grufo (talk) 01:25, 25 September 2020 (UTC)
- The sources you presented seem to back up the idea that concubinage involves lower status/lesser rights for one of the partners:
Nevertheless, concubinage remained a legalized form of couple relationship in various cultures, which differed from marriage in that it usually implied a considerably lower status of both the female partner and her offspring than that enjoyed by the legally married wife
— COHABITATION: AN ALTERNATIVE TO MARRIAGE?[The concubine's] station was above the infamy of a prostitute, and below the honors of a wife
— Against Nonmarital ExceptionalismThe partners in such relationships [concubinage] and the offspring of their union did not have the same legal rights accorded married persons and their legitimate children.
— Britannica- Do note that concubinage varied from culture to culture. The dictionaries all indicate the one of the definitions of concubinage is the state of being/having a concubine. Some dictionaries give an additional definition of cohabitation, but others don't. Most academic literature that specifically focuses on concubinage doesn't seem to talk about cohabitation. I think including a section on comparison of concubinage to cohabitation would be ok as long as it's not undue.VR talk 14:35, 25 September 2020 (UTC)
- “… which differed from marriage in that it usually implied …” ([14])
- The source is literally talking about the particular case of late Roman empire / early Christianity, and later compares it to a common-law marriage. You can't take that as a definition. Here's the entire text:
For example, at the time of the Roman empire, debates flourished about the dignitas type of marriage (a binding civil contract between the partners) and the concubinatus (a more flexible contractual arrangement subjected to fewer legal regulations and social consequences as far as children and inheritance was concerned – the child remained with the mother and inherited from her). Toward the last days of the empire, the Christian church became the most influential force of power in Europe, and with it the concubinatus family form disappeared and the dignitas marriage was reformed into a sacred and unbreakable union (Zimmerman and Cervantes, 1956). Nevertheless, concubinage remained a legalized form of couple relationship in various cultures, which differed from marriage in that it usually implied a considerably lower status of both the female partner and her offspring than that enjoyed by the legally married wife (Malinowski, 1963:10).
One example in the United States of tacitly sanctioned cohabitation is known as common law marriage. Ploscowe (1951) considers the basic thought underlying common law marriage to be that, if a man and a woman are living together and presumably portray themselves to the world as husband and wife, then the law treats them as having entered a common law marriage relationship. Common law marriage in the United States originated from the early frontier conditions, where the proper legal marriage often had to be postponed until a clergyperson could be found. It is still recognized in fifteen states today. Instead of being a choice against legal marriage, common law marriage was, throughout history, often an imperative and characteristic of the poor, somewhat comparable to conditions found in the Caribbean area as studied by Goode (1960), Blake (1976), Otterbein (1965), and Rodman (1966). Here, for economic reasons, "consensual" unions were often practiced as an acceptable means of obtaining children. Later on, when the male became better off economically, this union would be legalized by marriage. Thus, cohabitation became a means for adjustment to social-economic circumstances often affecting lower social classes. Marriage was, when possible, the preferred arrangement and it symbolized the transformation toward economic independence.
- “[The concubine's] station was above the infamy of a prostitute, and below the honors of a wife” ([15])
- Indeed. I agree with the text. Then modernity came and we invented a new word for it: girlfriend. I wouldn't say though that a boyfriend and a girlfriend have different status (although they may): they do have a different status compared to a husband and wife. Here is the whole paragraph you quoted:
A concubine in the Civil Law did not mean a harlot. She possessed the character of a wife, but without the sanction of a legal marriage. It was confined in Europe to a single person, and was a perpetual obligation, and was generally entered into by men who were forbidden by the State to marry one who lacked quality or fortune. The concubine could be accused of adultery . Her station was above the infamy of a prostitute, and below the honors of a wife.
- “The partners in such relationships [concubinage] and the offspring of their union did not have the same legal rights accorded married persons and their legitimate children.” ([16])
- Again, see boyfriend and girlfriend, or simply cohabiting partners.
- “The dictionaries all indicate the one of the definitions of concubinage is the state of being/having a concubine”
- It is interesting that something that would be almost tautological is placed as a second definition in most dictionaries.
- “Do note that concubinage varied from culture to culture”
- Sure, exactly to the same extent in which extra-marital cohabitation varies from culture to culture.
- “I think including a section on comparison of concubinage to cohabitation would be ok”
- Maybe it's more interesting to talk about the history of the word and its different usages in different contexts. Maybe at some point I will do that.
- --Grufo (talk) 16:39, 25 September 2020 (UTC)
it's more interesting to talk about the history of the word and its different usages in different contexts
That would be great if sourced reliably and kept in accordance in WP:DUE. Note it includes sometimes contradictory views on concubinage that we find in reliable sources.VR talk 01:59, 26 September 2020 (UTC)
- “… which differed from marriage in that it usually implied …” ([14])
Reservations regarding article content
I have some serious reservations about this entry as it stands.
1) AFAIK, in many societies that practiced concubinage, it was a specific legal status and concubines had specific rights, though not equal to those of a spouse.
2) Therefore, the "concubinal relationship" is not similar to modern Common law marriage or de facto marriage.
Comments? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Conversion script (talk • contribs) 15:43, 25 February 2002 (UTC)
- If you have some concrete information, add it. Be bold! :) —Frecklefoot 16:57, 2 Mar 2004 (UTC)
- Added the reference starting with "In ancient times..." to the first section. Prof Philip Daileader mentions this in his series of lecture on the Early Middle Ages, produced by The Teaching Company. I have been unable to find a print source for the same material. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 163.191.194.235 (talk) 21:00, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
Voluntary / Forced
This article makes it sound like concubinage is voluntary. There is the statement: "concubinage was frequently voluntary." That statement implies that sometimes concubinage was not voluntary; forced concubinage would involve repeated rape and should be discussed. It's also questionable how voluntary the "voluntary" concubinage really was.
The article states: "legitimate wives often gave their maids to their husbands to atone, at least in part, if they were barren, as in the cases of Sarah and Hagar, Rachel and Bilhah." How can a wife give a maid to a husband? What is going on there should be made explicit. It sounds like the husband and wife had a slave or semi-slave maid who was regarded as property. As the wife was barren, the wife tolerated the husband repeatedly raping the slave maid. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 129.67.108.193 (talk) 09:43, 7 August 2011 (UTC)
Today, when referring to a contemporary Civil union - failed verification
@Bonadea: I do not see how the source supports the underlined parts of either version of the following text:
- 12:35, 18 October 2020 In the past, the woman involved in a concubinage was referred to as a concubine (/ˈkɒŋkjʊˌbaɪn/ KONG-kyoo-bine), while the man simply as "lover" or "patron" (depending on the asymmetry of the couple). Especially among royalty and nobility, the woman in such relationships was commonly described as a mistress. Today, when referring to a contemporary Civil union (e.g. in the context of LGBT rights), the term "concubinage" is used, but the term "concubine" is normally dropped.[1]
- 12:45, 18 October 2020 "In present-day English, the term "concubinage" is not used about civil unions where there is the same equality of status as in a marriage, and the term "concubine" typically refers to women whose status is connected to their sexual or reproductive capabilities.[2]
- ^ The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History 2008, p. 468: "In twenty-first-century parlance, ‘concubine’ refers either to a mistress or a sex slave"
- ^ The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History 2008, p. 467-468: "In twenty-first-century parlance, ‘concubine’ refers either to a mistress or a sex slave"
-- Toddy1 (talk) 13:00, 18 October 2020 (UTC)
- @Toddy1: I agree that the first version is not clearly supported. I made a mistake in my first edit because I read the "failed verification" as meaning that the quote in the ref marker was not in the source, which it clearly is. My rewritten version is, to my eyes, a paraphrase of what the source says: the terms "concubinage" and "concubine" are used in contemporary language but not about "regular" everyday civil unions (between people of the same or different genders), rather, it refers to a specific kind of civil union "in societies in which women [...] can legitimately be viewed as sexual or reproductive servants" (that's also from p468 of the source). How would you suggest rephrasing that, as well as the quote in the reference, in a way that better reflects the source? --bonadea contributions talk 13:13, 18 October 2020 (UTC)
- Actually, the best thing to do might be to simply remove the quoted text from the citation. It is just a small part of all that's said about how 'concubinage' and 'concubine' are used on pp467-468, and I don't really see why that specific phrase should be quoted. --bonadea contributions talk 13:15, 18 October 2020 (UTC)
- The source is a good source, but I think the article uses it badly - missing out key elements.
- The first sentence of the lead says:
- Concubinage (/kənˈkjuːbɪnɪdʒ/ kəng-KYOO-bih-nij) is an interpersonal and sexual relationship between a man and a woman in which the couple does not want or cannot enter into a full marriage.[1]
- Page 467 of the cited source says:
- "The term 'concubinage' is used to describe a range of relationships. Historically, some form of concubinage can be found in most societies, and it is still widely practiced today. The essential characteristic of concubinage... is the cohabitation of a man and a woman in a long-term sexual relationship without the promise of legal marriage."
- In my opinion it would be an improvement to put that quotation as the first sentences of the lead. The quotation from page 468 is also worth putting into the article: "In twenty-first-century parlance, 'concubine' refers either to a mistress or a to sex slave." These two statements are to some extent contradictory - so it is probably best to have them next to each other in the lead.
- The source is a good source, but I think the article uses it badly - missing out key elements.
- I think the bit that you were trying to correct is best returned to what it was,[17] and have a FACT tag added to it.-- Toddy1 (talk) 13:50, 18 October 2020 (UTC)
Concubinage is allowed in Islam
To fellow Muslims: Please do not make up that concubinage is forbidden in Islam. It is allowed, under many conditions. If you are a Muslim, you have no reason to feel ashamed and try to legislate otherwise. There is no reason to lie in order to please non-Muslims subjective view of morality. It is perfectly allowed, just like it is in Judaism and Jesus never prohibits it in the Bible. For Islamic legislation matters, please refer only to learned religious scholars, instead of some bookwriter's own personal opinion. almoravid (talk) 14:27, 26 August 2020 (UTC)
- Wikipedia is not a proper forum for personal religious debates. Please only contribute NEUTRAL, HISTORICAL, FACTUALLY ACCURATE edits to this section. The encyclopedia does not benefit from religious interpretation, which is not appropriate here. Aroundthewayboy (talk) 16:26, 29 September 2020 (UTC)
Since the beginning, concubines have contradicted Islamic principles that uphold women's rights. Even Allah Forbid and Trying to Eliminate Such Things with Rules That Burd the Perpetrators, please search the Internet for the Rules (If here is enough).
Do not say the opinion of the Shi'ah as the opinion of the entire Muslim Ummah, we know that Muslims have many groups which of course have different opinions. even the mujtahid engage in ijtihad with Islamic Basis or Foundation,12:45, 12 May 2021 (UTC)
Gay concubinage
The first sentence refers to "a man and a woman", yet Mexican states recognise gay concubinage. So we can either say that the meaning of the formerly cognate word in Mexico has diverged, at the very least, from its English meaning, or this is outdated. Given that the page is still linked to that of the Spanish word, which does not include this stipulation, I think the latter is more reasonable. Also, the term in popular parlance does not evoke "a" man and "a" woman, singular.— Preceding unsigned comment added by 101.112.242.20 (talk) 11:30, 1 October 2021 (UTC)
Problem with sourcing the gender neutral concubinage
I have changed “… interpersonal and sexual relationship between a man and a woman in which the couple …” into “… interpersonal and sexual relationship between two persons in which the couple …”, as many countries today recognize homosexual concubinage (e.g.: France, Mexico). However we should change the source used for the first sentence, as the The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History does not cover this (and probably still the majority of the sources). --Grufo (talk) 03:10, 23 October 2021 (UTC)
- Wikipedia policy is that articles should be based on what reliable sources say.-- Toddy1 (talk) 21:28, 23 October 2021 (UTC)
- “Two persons” does not really contradict “a man and a woman”, and could survive well also with the Oxford. However it is never bad to add sources. I will see what I can do. --Grufo (talk) 19:51, 24 October 2021 (UTC)
- Grufo you added this source. Who is publisher of this or is it WP:SELFPUB? Do you think it is a WP:RS? VR talk 20:07, 24 October 2021 (UTC)
- It is a well-known law dictionary maintained by Lloyd Duhaime, used in plenty of Wikipedia articles and suggested by the Oxford Bodleian Libraries. --Grufo (talk) 20:12, 24 October 2021 (UTC)
- What its saying does contradict other sources I've read on the topic, so I wonder if this definition is more modern or limited to certain countries. If so, we should make that clear. Although I'm not sure if the lead is for this, maybe we should have a section called "Definitions" or "Overview" that explains what concubinage is before we cover its long history.VR talk 00:36, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- It is definitely very modern (21st century). From a legal point of view concubinage holds a strange position, because it has often been used to label all relationships not covered by marriage, so it was often an umbrella term (and therefore in the past often used with negative connotations – you can see these negative connotations still today in the documents produced by Christian churches). This changes from country to country though, because in France it has been a legal term since Napoleon, and many countries (if not most? I really don't know) tend to have some laws about concubinage – even just for forbidding it (homosexual or even heterosexual). I am really not an expert on law, but realities where you will use the term for homomosexual couples do exist. --Grufo (talk) 04:13, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- I'll add a section called "Overview" with definitions and characteristics on concubinage based on sources I found and you can integrate the sources you found.VR talk 04:31, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- I am not sure creating an Overview section about definitions is a good idea. All definitions of concubinage are quite alike, the only rarity is homosexual concubinage. --Grufo (talk) 04:53, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- I'll add a section called "Overview" with definitions and characteristics on concubinage based on sources I found and you can integrate the sources you found.VR talk 04:31, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- It is definitely very modern (21st century). From a legal point of view concubinage holds a strange position, because it has often been used to label all relationships not covered by marriage, so it was often an umbrella term (and therefore in the past often used with negative connotations – you can see these negative connotations still today in the documents produced by Christian churches). This changes from country to country though, because in France it has been a legal term since Napoleon, and many countries (if not most? I really don't know) tend to have some laws about concubinage – even just for forbidding it (homosexual or even heterosexual). I am really not an expert on law, but realities where you will use the term for homomosexual couples do exist. --Grufo (talk) 04:13, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- What its saying does contradict other sources I've read on the topic, so I wonder if this definition is more modern or limited to certain countries. If so, we should make that clear. Although I'm not sure if the lead is for this, maybe we should have a section called "Definitions" or "Overview" that explains what concubinage is before we cover its long history.VR talk 00:36, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- It is a well-known law dictionary maintained by Lloyd Duhaime, used in plenty of Wikipedia articles and suggested by the Oxford Bodleian Libraries. --Grufo (talk) 20:12, 24 October 2021 (UTC)
- Grufo you added this source. Who is publisher of this or is it WP:SELFPUB? Do you think it is a WP:RS? VR talk 20:07, 24 October 2021 (UTC)
- “Two persons” does not really contradict “a man and a woman”, and could survive well also with the Oxford. However it is never bad to add sources. I will see what I can do. --Grufo (talk) 19:51, 24 October 2021 (UTC)
The purpose of the lead is to summarize the article. Currently the lead gives an overview of concubinage (something that is then never repeated in the article) but it doesn't summarize the practice of concubinage in various parts of the world (to which most of the article is devoted). If the lead is 4 paragraphs, then at most 1 should be on the overview and the other 3 should be on summarizing the rest of the article. Further details on the overview should go in a section called "Overview".VR talk 05:05, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- Seen it. For once that is not bad. I would just remove the word “scholars”: concubinage being an open term makes it impossible to have “concubinage scholars”. I will try to reformulate that sentence. --Grufo (talk) 05:13, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- I have done a bit of review and moved some paragraphs from the lead to the new section. Important notes:
- I have changed “Concubinage is” to “The historical meaning of concubinage is”, or this will conflict with the lead – if you have alternative solutions feel free to add
- I have only moved paragraphs from the lead to the new section with virtually no changes, but some of the paragraphs that I moved look pretty bad and would need to be rewritten
- --Grufo (talk) 06:12, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- Thanks. I think the whole lead needs to be rewritten, I have only kept the bare minimum in the lead for now.VR talk 12:36, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- I have done a bit of review and moved some paragraphs from the lead to the new section. Important notes:
This article appears to have been rewritten to promote a non-mainstream point of view. It gives WP:UNDUE prominence to this point of view.-- Toddy1 (talk) 14:27, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- I agree. The intro section now poorly relates to the article, in violation of the purpose of WP:SUMMARY. Iskandar323 (talk) 12:50, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
Changing text without changing sources
Grufo here you changed the text of a sentence without adding a new source. The result is that we have a sentence containing information that can't be verified in the subsequent inline citation. This is a WP:V problem. I'm making a section out of this because this is the second time you've done so this week (this was the first time). In the future please also change the source to reflect the text changes. Alternatively, if you can't find a source please add the text to talk requesting someone else to find the source.VR talk 12:22, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- It is a complicate subject, Vice regent. We are talking about a term which was both institutionalized by the Roman law and still used with its original meaning (“concubinus” / “concubina” literally means “co-sleeper”, “friend with benefits”, and Romans used it in all situations where they needed to talk about “friends with benefits”, but also “boyfriend”, “girlfriend”, etc.). To express it simply, the Roman Law at some point created the institution of concubinatus (i.e. civil union), but the usage of “concubinus” / “concubina” was already widespread as umbrella terms. Furthermore, although the relationship was mutual, the society was still patriarcal (the decision to marry or not was ultimately a man's decision). According to Roman jurists a man's lack of intention to marry was the only distinctive factor which allowed to define a relationship a “concubinatus” (Stocquart discusses extensively about this). Furthermore, besides the “concubinatus” institution, “concubinus” / “concubina” retained their umbrella meanings (and yes, they were used also for homosexual relationships; In Catullus 61, for example, a bridegroom must break up with his “concubinus” – “male lover” – because time has come to grow up and marry a woman – and although the term “concubinus” is used, we are definitely not talking about the institution of “concubinatus” there). Since I know that the situation is really complex, I have been careful to phrase my sentence in the right context, which is the Roman Law, which did not really care if one was rich and one was poor, or if one was freed or freeborn; the only thing the law cared about was that both lovers were Roman citizens and they were not married. In that context the relationship was as much mutual as it could be: identical to marriage but without the intention to marry (and jurists are very clear about this). In Roman society a lot of “informal concubinages” existed too (i.e., persons cheating on their spouses with stable lovers), but these were not protected by the law, as this required monogamy. I will do a literature review later, but not now, I don't work full time for Wikipedia. --Grufo (talk) 17:20, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- It is worth remembering that English-language words do not always have the same meaning as the Latin words they descended from - the obvious example is prevent (from the Latin word prevenio). The Roman use of various Latin terms is relevant to this article, but does not define what a concubine is in English.-- Toddy1 (talk) 13:46, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- When you talk about Rome yes, you tend to stick to the meaning that it had there. A good example is the word “prince”, which in English is used for rulers' children, but when you discuss about Rome it goes back to its original meaning “princeps”, and you form sentences like “Prince of the Senate”. --Grufo (talk) 16:35, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- As Toddy1 notes, we should not be using the Roman meanings of Latin-derived origins words as the definitions of a concubine in English. That is just etymology. Only where Roman institutions bear resemblance to the standard English definitions of concubinage should they be referenced in the rest of the article. Looking at the intro and the bits about civil unions, it looks like much of the article has become mixed up in this basic lack of distinction. Concubinatus has its own article. Concubinage in English is not about the union of free citizens. Iskandar323 (talk) 18:07, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- Looking at this in a bit more detail, it seems there are two definitions of concubinage, and they represent a fundamental split in meaning. One pertains to living arrangements and is sometimes used as a matter of law, and this seems more akin to the Roman concubinatus, and then of course we have concubinage as in the keeping of concubines, which is what I had assumed this article was about (and it appears to be about, at least for the main part). Given how these are two fundamentally different subjects, perhaps a content split is required to create an article that can tackle modern legal uses modelled on the Roman meaning, as in cohabitation etc., to be named Concubinage (legal), or similar. Iskandar323 (talk) 18:18, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- Or we can have a WP:hatnote at the top of the article that directs the reader to Cohabitation. I think what Grufo is referring to is better covered there.VR talk 18:20, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- Well, perhaps, but it does look like there are some oddly specific uses of "concubinage" as terminology in at least some legal systems, [18] with France and the Philippines popping up immediately in search. But yes, something has got to give. at the moment we have a bizarre intro about cohabitation and talk about civil unions fronting an article about medieval mistresses. Iskandar323 (talk) 18:23, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- Here is a source that explains that modern cohabitation is monogamous, while a concubine was in addition to a wife and the concubine was also regarded as inferior in many ways (the source mentions how a man couldn't promote concubine to a wife, but in cohabitation the couple can get married if they so choose).VR talk 18:28, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- Polygamy is irrelevant in this context. Marriages can be polygamous too, but that does not affect the usage of the word. --Grufo (talk) 18:34, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- Here is a source that explains that modern cohabitation is monogamous, while a concubine was in addition to a wife and the concubine was also regarded as inferior in many ways (the source mentions how a man couldn't promote concubine to a wife, but in cohabitation the couple can get married if they so choose).VR talk 18:28, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- There is not a split in meaning, concubinage means marriage-like cohabitation in all sources (if an editor thinks a split is present, they are invited to explain how it manifests). The main difference with Latin is that the English term concubinage does not require that both members are free (non-slave) citizens like the Latin did, and so we don't require that either (unless we talk about Rome). --Grufo (talk) 18:31, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- Both myself and Vice Regent have just explained how it differs. Most encyclopedia definitions for concubinage provide two separate definitions [19]:
1. Law Cohabitation without legal marriage. 2. The state of being a concubine.
You can't confuse both in one article. And to be honest, I think the meaning relating to concubines is the more obvious one. I had never heard use of the word in relation to cohabitation before I saw this article, because the word cohabitation already exists in normal usage, and concubinage is clearly only used to refer to cohabitating situations where it pertains to matters of law. The source that Vice Regent found [20] differentiating between modern cohabitation and concubinage is also not irrelevant. However, your point is. It doesn't matter if marriages can be polygamous. What matters is that there is a clear definition, from a social perspective, between modern monogamous cohabitation, and ancient concubinage, which is in fact entirely separate - involving multiple wives and concubines, sometimes living together, but often not, and, as Vice Regent crucially states, quite often with no route to marriage, which stands in stark contrast to any form of modern cohabitation. As Vice Regent notes, any content that is purely about cohabitation should be moved to the cohabitation page (perhaps under history), and content on modern legal practices that utilise the terminology "concubinage" should go into a separate article entitled Concubinage (legal). I was thinking that the material might actually need some sort of triple split earlier, but Vice Regent has now made this absolutely clear. Iskandar323 (talk) 04:48, 27 October 2021 (UTC)- This is pure WP:OR. Being a concubine means being in a concubinage. Being in a concubinage means making love and cohabiting together without the rights that marriage offers (often inheritance). Thus being a woman in a concubinage (“the condition of being a concubine”) means making love with a man without too many certainties about the future. What this meant concretely changed from society to society. In patriarchate, concubinage meant very few rights for the woman. There are not two different definitions that I am aware of, and the only differentiation I have seen is that when concubinage becomes too close to sexual slavery the sources start to use “slave”, “sex slave”, “slave-concubine” instead of plain “concubine”. --Grufo (talk) 05:51, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- It's not WP:OR - it is what the sources say, and a little bit of WP:COMMONSENSE. The dictionary definition I've provided literally states that the use of the term concubinage to mean "cohabitation" is strictly a legal definition. The non-legal definition is a setup involving concubines. This is why the definitions are labelled (1.) and (2.) - and you are blurring these two definitions. As you have said, no one says "I am a concubine" to mean "I live with my partner." These ideas are worlds apart. Yes, concubinage from antiquity through to early modern times came with a scale of meanings, from sex-slave through to mistress, but none of these ideas come even close to ideas such as a legal term for cohabitation or anything to do with civil unions. The point that almost defines concubines is that their relationships are typically outside of normal unions or marriage. Iskandar323 (talk) 06:48, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- “A setup involving concubines”? Is that your alternative definition of concubinage? Does concubinage have to be polygamic according to you? If this is not WP:OR I don't know what WP:OR is. You could have just given a look at the first encyclopedias that appear on Google (#1, #2, #3, #4). If you are Christian you could have read the definition of concubinage according to the Catholic Church, and if you read Arabic I believe that the Arabic Wikipedia page for concubinage can be interesting to read (Google Translate). Just out of curiosity, what did you think that concubinage was before reading this article? I am sorry if I sound harsh, Iskandar323, but I can't do this, not again. --Grufo (talk) 10:45, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Chill Grufo. I'm allowed to paraphrase in a talk page discussion. That isn't a phraseology that I have added, unsourced to the article. You can choose to pretend to be blankly unaware of the points that every single other editor is trying to make to you in this discussion, but dwelling on turns of phrase isn't the same as making a compelling case. Before I read this article, I obviously thought (and still think) that concubinage refers to the keeping of concubines, or the state of being a concubine. I repeat. Obviously. The endless parade of weird definitions to do with cohabitation, civil union and now catholic terminology are frankly all odd and clearly niche. Most of these definitions also only apply to the term in the narrowly defined context of the legal system of a single country, such as cohabitation in France, or a narrowly defined form of adultery in the Philippines. These are all comparatively fringe definitions relative to the more obvious meaning of "pertaining to concubines". I'm definitely not interested in whatever weird Catholic definition of the term can be derived from the New Advent website, which I have checked for in the WP:RS archive and of which it has been noted that it only ever seems to crop up in relation to the citation of the Catholic Encyclopedia. I'm calling that unreliable until proven otherwise. Iskandar323 (talk) 10:59, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- “A setup involving concubines”? Is that your alternative definition of concubinage? Does concubinage have to be polygamic according to you? If this is not WP:OR I don't know what WP:OR is. You could have just given a look at the first encyclopedias that appear on Google (#1, #2, #3, #4). If you are Christian you could have read the definition of concubinage according to the Catholic Church, and if you read Arabic I believe that the Arabic Wikipedia page for concubinage can be interesting to read (Google Translate). Just out of curiosity, what did you think that concubinage was before reading this article? I am sorry if I sound harsh, Iskandar323, but I can't do this, not again. --Grufo (talk) 10:45, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- It's not WP:OR - it is what the sources say, and a little bit of WP:COMMONSENSE. The dictionary definition I've provided literally states that the use of the term concubinage to mean "cohabitation" is strictly a legal definition. The non-legal definition is a setup involving concubines. This is why the definitions are labelled (1.) and (2.) - and you are blurring these two definitions. As you have said, no one says "I am a concubine" to mean "I live with my partner." These ideas are worlds apart. Yes, concubinage from antiquity through to early modern times came with a scale of meanings, from sex-slave through to mistress, but none of these ideas come even close to ideas such as a legal term for cohabitation or anything to do with civil unions. The point that almost defines concubines is that their relationships are typically outside of normal unions or marriage. Iskandar323 (talk) 06:48, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- This is pure WP:OR. Being a concubine means being in a concubinage. Being in a concubinage means making love and cohabiting together without the rights that marriage offers (often inheritance). Thus being a woman in a concubinage (“the condition of being a concubine”) means making love with a man without too many certainties about the future. What this meant concretely changed from society to society. In patriarchate, concubinage meant very few rights for the woman. There are not two different definitions that I am aware of, and the only differentiation I have seen is that when concubinage becomes too close to sexual slavery the sources start to use “slave”, “sex slave”, “slave-concubine” instead of plain “concubine”. --Grufo (talk) 05:51, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Both myself and Vice Regent have just explained how it differs. Most encyclopedia definitions for concubinage provide two separate definitions [19]:
- Well, perhaps, but it does look like there are some oddly specific uses of "concubinage" as terminology in at least some legal systems, [18] with France and the Philippines popping up immediately in search. But yes, something has got to give. at the moment we have a bizarre intro about cohabitation and talk about civil unions fronting an article about medieval mistresses. Iskandar323 (talk) 18:23, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- Or we can have a WP:hatnote at the top of the article that directs the reader to Cohabitation. I think what Grufo is referring to is better covered there.VR talk 18:20, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- Looking at this in a bit more detail, it seems there are two definitions of concubinage, and they represent a fundamental split in meaning. One pertains to living arrangements and is sometimes used as a matter of law, and this seems more akin to the Roman concubinatus, and then of course we have concubinage as in the keeping of concubines, which is what I had assumed this article was about (and it appears to be about, at least for the main part). Given how these are two fundamentally different subjects, perhaps a content split is required to create an article that can tackle modern legal uses modelled on the Roman meaning, as in cohabitation etc., to be named Concubinage (legal), or similar. Iskandar323 (talk) 18:18, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- It is worth remembering that English-language words do not always have the same meaning as the Latin words they descended from - the obvious example is prevent (from the Latin word prevenio). The Roman use of various Latin terms is relevant to this article, but does not define what a concubine is in English.-- Toddy1 (talk) 13:46, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
Please note that "concubine" redirects to this page. There is no other page about concubines on Wikipedia. If you want to insist on talking about concubinage in terms of narrowly defined legal terms, perhaps it would be better to simply rename this page "Concubine" and then you can take your Roman law elsewhere. Iskandar323 (talk) 11:08, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Please browse any encyclopedia: this page does exactly what most encyclopedias do with concubinage. --Grufo (talk) 11:17, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Look at the sources in the "Overview" section. The only legal definitions of concubinage exist in France (still in use) and the US (obselete). These are not broad definitions. They are highly specific. They come from the legal sections of encyclopedias, and source either French or US legal books. Iskandar323 (talk) 11:44, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Do you see the blue in this map? These are all the countries that have laws about concubinage that come straight from the Roman Law. To those you have to add some US states, Scotland, Quebec, South Africa, and probably some other country. --Grufo (talk) 11:53, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- I think you must have linked to the wrong map - File:Map of the Legal systems of the world (en).png does not mention what you say.-- Toddy1 (talk) 12:05, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Of course it doesn't. That page mentions the countries that apply the Civil law system. You can check individually on each of these countries (I won't do that for you), but you might have to use Google with the local translation of concubinage. If you are curious to know how Roman laws ended up in modern countries, Corpus Juris Civilis is the page for you (boring page if you ask). --Grufo (talk) 12:12, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Now THIS Grufo is WP:OR - assuming that because legal systems are very distantly derived from Roman Law that they still contain specific provisions related to concubinage. That is unambiguous conjecture and WP:SYNTHESIS. Iskandar323 (talk) 12:39, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- If you don't want to use Google you can directly click on the “Languages” section on the left bar of the Wikipedia “concubinage” article and check via Google Translator if they mention anything concerning the law of their country. It's definitely not a conjecture and I know what I am talking about. --Grufo (talk) 12:45, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- In most languages, the corresponding article is no more than a stub, but there is an interesting note in German:
"While the term is generally out of date in German-speaking countries, it has remained alive in Switzerland and is also used for current unmarried couples."
So, dead in Germany, but we can possibly add Switzerland to the list. Iskandar323 (talk) 13:11, 27 October 2021 (UTC)- The list is virtually all the countries that apply the Civil law system (concubinage is part of that system) – plus the other countries I mentioned above. In Germany is outdated in the spoken language, but not in the law. --Grufo (talk) 13:16, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- All you are really doing here is proving that there is a distinct legal meaning that is totally separate from the definition of practices regarding concubines and justifying my call for an article split. Iskandar323 (talk) 13:41, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- There is not a distinctive meaning. The meaning is just one: quasi-marriage without all the additional rights and status that come from marriage (this of course concretely meant very different things depending on the context and the epoch). If you think differently you are free to make a counter-example where this definition does not apply. --Grufo (talk) 13:45, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- All you are really doing here is proving that there is a distinct legal meaning that is totally separate from the definition of practices regarding concubines and justifying my call for an article split. Iskandar323 (talk) 13:41, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- The list is virtually all the countries that apply the Civil law system (concubinage is part of that system) – plus the other countries I mentioned above. In Germany is outdated in the spoken language, but not in the law. --Grufo (talk) 13:16, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- In most languages, the corresponding article is no more than a stub, but there is an interesting note in German:
- If you don't want to use Google you can directly click on the “Languages” section on the left bar of the Wikipedia “concubinage” article and check via Google Translator if they mention anything concerning the law of their country. It's definitely not a conjecture and I know what I am talking about. --Grufo (talk) 12:45, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Now THIS Grufo is WP:OR - assuming that because legal systems are very distantly derived from Roman Law that they still contain specific provisions related to concubinage. That is unambiguous conjecture and WP:SYNTHESIS. Iskandar323 (talk) 12:39, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Of course it doesn't. That page mentions the countries that apply the Civil law system. You can check individually on each of these countries (I won't do that for you), but you might have to use Google with the local translation of concubinage. If you are curious to know how Roman laws ended up in modern countries, Corpus Juris Civilis is the page for you (boring page if you ask). --Grufo (talk) 12:12, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Umm, that's just a map of law in general. It bears absolutely zero relevance to this discussion. Iskandar323 (talk) 12:06, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- I think you must have linked to the wrong map - File:Map of the Legal systems of the world (en).png does not mention what you say.-- Toddy1 (talk) 12:05, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Do you see the blue in this map? These are all the countries that have laws about concubinage that come straight from the Roman Law. To those you have to add some US states, Scotland, Quebec, South Africa, and probably some other country. --Grufo (talk) 11:53, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Look at the sources in the "Overview" section. The only legal definitions of concubinage exist in France (still in use) and the US (obselete). These are not broad definitions. They are highly specific. They come from the legal sections of encyclopedias, and source either French or US legal books. Iskandar323 (talk) 11:44, 27 October 2021 (UTC)
- Grufo, you did something similar again. Here you provided this as a source for the text "
From this traditional meaning found in Roman law comes the contemporary usage of concubinage as a synonym for civil union, used in civil law.
" But nowhere do I see this source saying that the contemporary meaning of concubinage is being derived from Roman law. I don't know if what you wrote is true, but its not supported by the sources you provided.VR talk 14:51, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
- Then you had put {{cn}} in the wrong place. I saw it after “concubinage as a synonym for civil union, used in civil law.” and I replaced it with a source that shows the usage in civil law. What else did you want a source for? --Grufo (talk) 16:27, 26 October 2021 (UTC)
Merging sections
I think the sections on "Ancient Near East", "Judaism" and "Islam" should be merged into one section "Middle East" that contains the history of concubinage from ancient Mesopotamia to the Muslim world. Any objections?VR talk 15:46, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- It does not seem a good idea. The current structure encourages people to add material on cultures in the ancient near east when they find good sources. A merged section would encourage Wikipedia's many Islamic fanatics to overwhelm it with the sort of rubbish that they always add.-- Toddy1 (talk) 16:09, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
"Concubinage (legal term)" created
I have created the page Concubinage (legal term) as a location where the more recent pre-modern and modern legal definitions of concubinage can be fleshed out based on the available information on different jurisdictions. It is currently still very much a stub, with only the applications in France, the US and the Philippines (albeit the jurisdictions where the term seems to have had the most usage) expanded. Iskandar323 (talk) 19:43, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
Why didn't you add any categories? Dimadick (talk) 19:59, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- Sorry, not sure, just slipped my mind! But I wouldn't have thought of 14th-century neologisms without your help anyway! Iskandar323 (talk) 20:04, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
Lead rewrite
I think the lead should be rewritten. Probably the simplest way to rewrite is to have the following summary format of paragraphs:
- gives overview of concubinage (reflection section "Overview")
- summarizes "In Europe" and "In the Americas", this is where we can mention the Latin roots of the word
- summarizes "Ancient Near East", "In Judaism" and "In Islam and the Arab world"
- summarizes "In Asia"
The lead shouldn't have more than four paragraphs (MOS:LEADLENGTH).VR talk 12:41, 25 October 2021 (UTC)
- @Toddy1, Grufo, and Iskandar323: what do you think of this proposal? VR talk 16:19, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- I am not sure I understand the proposal well enough to comment. For example, (2) "summarises "In Europe" and "In the Americas", this is where we can mention the Latin roots of the word" Do you mean in 20th/21st Century Europe/the Americas?
- For most of history China, India, and the Middle East have been the three centres of civilisation on this planet. So surely they should come before anything on Europe and the Americas.-- Toddy1 (talk) 16:51, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- No, I meant historic Europe (including ancient Greece and Rome) and colonial Americas where concubinage was widely practiced. All of this is already in the article, it just needs to be summarized for the lead.VR talk 17:31, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- The lead as it is now has two good characteristic: it is short and well phrased. I am for leaving it like this and avoid disputes. --Grufo (talk) 17:12, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- No the lead needs to summarize the body as per WP:LEAD.VR talk 17:31, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- For most of history China, India, and the Middle East have been the three centres of civilisation on this planet. So surely they should come before anything on Europe and the Americas.-- Toddy1 (talk) 16:51, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- Indeed it does that. --Grufo (talk) 17:32, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- It does not, it merely defines concubinage. If this article is about the history of its practice, there is nothing in the lead regarding that.VR talk 17:42, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- No, the article is about what concubinage is. The fact that we decide to give much space to history is simply due to the personal preferences / personal expertise of the editors who wrote the various parts. But it remains an article called “Concubinage”, and not “History of concubinage”. It might well expand to “Views on concubinage”, “Concubinage in various countries”, “Legal history of concubinage”, and so on. Usually when you have an article “X” and a section named “History of X” the lead does not summarizes the history. --Grufo (talk) 17:51, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- The present lead is POV and does not summarise the article.-- Toddy1 (talk) 18:25, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- No, the article is about what concubinage is. The fact that we decide to give much space to history is simply due to the personal preferences / personal expertise of the editors who wrote the various parts. But it remains an article called “Concubinage”, and not “History of concubinage”. It might well expand to “Views on concubinage”, “Concubinage in various countries”, “Legal history of concubinage”, and so on. Usually when you have an article “X” and a section named “History of X” the lead does not summarizes the history. --Grufo (talk) 17:51, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- It does not, it merely defines concubinage. If this article is about the history of its practice, there is nothing in the lead regarding that.VR talk 17:42, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- Indeed it does that. --Grufo (talk) 17:32, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- The present short description: "Interpersonal relationship in which the couple are not or cannot be married" is much worse. For example: I have a long-standing friendship with an antiquarian bookseller. Does that mean that I am his concubine? It is an interpersonal relationship. We are not married. No, I am a customer of the bookshop he owns! The present short description omits key features of concubinage that do not apply to being a customer of his bookshop. I suggest: "Concubinage is a durable male-female sexual relationship where the female concubine lives under her man's roof, but the concubine and her man are not married."-- Toddy1 (talk) 18:25, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- To be absolutely precise, and encompass the multiple current meanings in the article, the current short description would need to be something like: "A legalised form of male-female relationship outside of marriage in the ancient world, or, a pre-modern to modern legal term and framework for cohabitation by a couple without marriage" Iskandar323 (talk) 20:10, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
The present short description
Problem solved --Grufo (talk) 20:13, 30 October 2021 (UTC)- Only in your mind Grufo - there are two key distinctions between the two definitions: ancient concubines (as far as I am aware always female) did not necessarily cohabit with their male partner - take, for example, Ottomoman concubines, who lived separately in the Haremlik. And while their children might be legitimised, their station offered little by way of legal rights. The pre-modern to modern legal terms and legislative frameworks convey rights to partnerships between cohabiting equals, of any gender. Quite a few differences there. Iskandar323 (talk) 20:51, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- I agree that using concubinage for sex slaves is “forcing it”. But you all know that. We refer anyway to dictionaries, especially for short descriptions. --Grufo (talk) 20:56, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- The simple fact of that matter is that concubinage has been used historically to refer to main situations that you, from your lofty and highly judgmental modern perspective might consider to be sexual slavery. It is not forcing anything. This article is about a term, "concubinage", and all of the uses of that term - not a select few, or those that you find most palatable. Iskandar323 (talk) 21:48, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- I agree that using concubinage for sex slaves is “forcing it”. But you all know that. We refer anyway to dictionaries, especially for short descriptions. --Grufo (talk) 20:56, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- Only in your mind Grufo - there are two key distinctions between the two definitions: ancient concubines (as far as I am aware always female) did not necessarily cohabit with their male partner - take, for example, Ottomoman concubines, who lived separately in the Haremlik. And while their children might be legitimised, their station offered little by way of legal rights. The pre-modern to modern legal terms and legislative frameworks convey rights to partnerships between cohabiting equals, of any gender. Quite a few differences there. Iskandar323 (talk) 20:51, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- The present short description: "Interpersonal relationship in which the couple are not or cannot be married" is much worse. For example: I have a long-standing friendship with an antiquarian bookseller. Does that mean that I am his concubine? It is an interpersonal relationship. We are not married. No, I am a customer of the bookshop he owns! The present short description omits key features of concubinage that do not apply to being a customer of his bookshop. I suggest: "Concubinage is a durable male-female sexual relationship where the female concubine lives under her man's roof, but the concubine and her man are not married."-- Toddy1 (talk) 18:25, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- @Iskandar323: P.S. Do you want to know why I am so much against using concubinage for sexual slavery? I, for example, am one of those who did not know that Ottomoman concubines were required to be sex slaves. I used to think “Yeah, they had polygamous marriages, concubinage is a lesser marriage, thus Ottoman concubinage was a lesser polygamous marriage”. Wrong, of course. If I remember well (but don't ask me the page), Jonathan Brown in Slavery and Islam complains about something similar. He asked his students about the status of one of Mohammad's sex slaves often presented as “concubine”, and everyone answered “she was one of his wives”. Duh. Using concubinage for sexual slavery is inherently misleading/apologetic/obfuscating/unclear. --Grufo (talk) 21:22, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- Concubine is simply a label for a position within a household - in different times and different cultural settings, it could entail a range of roles, responsibilities and power. As I have said, Concubines in Mongol society could often rise higher than lesser wives. In the Ottoman Imperial Harem, some concubines were slaves (sometimes also called slave-concubines), but others were free women who entered concubinage as a means to climb the social ladder. The problem is that you are trying to condense a highly varied set of circumstances from a huge slice of human history and various geographies into some sort of catch-all, narrow definition. Iskandar323 (talk) 21:41, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- @Iskandar323: P.S. Do you want to know why I am so much against using concubinage for sexual slavery? I, for example, am one of those who did not know that Ottomoman concubines were required to be sex slaves. I used to think “Yeah, they had polygamous marriages, concubinage is a lesser marriage, thus Ottoman concubinage was a lesser polygamous marriage”. Wrong, of course. If I remember well (but don't ask me the page), Jonathan Brown in Slavery and Islam complains about something similar. He asked his students about the status of one of Mohammad's sex slaves often presented as “concubine”, and everyone answered “she was one of his wives”. Duh. Using concubinage for sexual slavery is inherently misleading/apologetic/obfuscating/unclear. --Grufo (talk) 21:22, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
Besides the fact that “condensing a highly varied set of circumstances … into some sort of catch-all, narrow definition” is like the definition of what a short description is meant to do, my dictionaries' definition is an open definition, which means that you can actually force slavery into it. What you and Vice regent are trying to do instead, in spite of the fact that “concubinage” has been used for almost two millennia only for defining Roman-like quasi-marriages (and only with modernity adapted to non-European cultures) is forcing Wikipedia to ignore the actual meaning of the word and POV-push “sexual slavery in history” as its main meaning. Who said that this page should be almost only about history in the first place? And why should a page about quasi-marital relationships focus on sex slaves? What about like 90% of the world that uses the word today and in the past with its actual meaning? --Grufo (talk) 05:40, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- That is such a patronising, western orientalist perspective. You think concubinage Mongol culture, Chinese culture, any other Asian culture I care to recall just rubbed off from the Romans? I think not. In fact, I rather suspect Imperial China probably had concubines long before the rise of the Romans. What you continue to do is confuse the fact that "concubine" has become general terminology in the English language, with the idea that because that term is derived from Latin in English, that any iteration of concubinage that uses these terms has to, on some level, be derived from Roman practice. The first order of business is really to get around your mental block on this. Iskandar323 (talk) 07:17, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
I've written the paragraphs for Asia and for Middle East and Africa in my sandbox. Feedback welcome. Is Grufo interested in writing the paragraph for Europe? If not, I'll do that too.VR talk 22:02, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
- This page focuses already too much on history, Vice regent. I propose to split the history into separate articles, like the ones that we already have Concubinatus, Concubinage in China, Ōoku, etc., and leave only the bare essential history here. Europe could potentially be one of the biggest chapters. It would start after the fall of the Roman empire with a millenary battle between secular law (which kept improving the rights of concubinage) and Church (which wanted to abolish concubinage). Clerical concubinage is a big chapter, so as aristocratic concubinage. Then there is concubinage between Europeans and people from colonized lands who were not considered not suitable for marriage. I doubt you can find a single source that covers the entire history of European concubinage. A simple Google Search on “clerical concubinage” will give you an idea of the amount of literature you will have to deal with. Don't forget that the word concubinage has been used by Europeans for almost two millennia with its actual meaning, and only with modernity it has been adapted to non-European societies. Feel free to write that if you want. But do not POV-push the usage of “concubinage” for meaning sex slaves, because that is really not what it meant there. --Grufo (talk) 05:40, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- A lead is supposed to reflect what the page already focuses on. You can propose a split below and see if there is consensus. But until then the lead needs to reflect the rest of the article. Do you want to write a paragraph on history of European concubinage or shall I?VR talk 06:55, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- Although interesting, I don't have the time to do that. --Grufo (talk) 08:06, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- This may, perhaps ultimately be a better approach - an umbrella article on concubinage in general, in its various forms, and separate further explanatory articles on, say: Concubinage in Europe, Concubinage in the Middle East, Concubinage in East Asia, etc. It would certainly be more digestible. Iskandar323 (talk) 07:29, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- I.e.: in the style of Concubinage in China, as you have helpfully pointed out, Grufo - see, we can agree! Iskandar323 (talk) 07:30, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- I have created that page, as I have created also concubinatus and contubernium – but only contubernium is entirely mine. Concubinage in China was born as a split from this page and other parts of Wikipedia. Chinese concubines did not need to be slaves. --Grufo (talk) 07:55, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- From my research Chinese concubines could be of either slave or freeborn origin.VR talk 08:07, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- I have created that page, as I have created also concubinatus and contubernium – but only contubernium is entirely mine. Concubinage in China was born as a split from this page and other parts of Wikipedia. Chinese concubines did not need to be slaves. --Grufo (talk) 07:55, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- I.e.: in the style of Concubinage in China, as you have helpfully pointed out, Grufo - see, we can agree! Iskandar323 (talk) 07:30, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- A lead is supposed to reflect what the page already focuses on. You can propose a split below and see if there is consensus. But until then the lead needs to reflect the rest of the article. Do you want to write a paragraph on history of European concubinage or shall I?VR talk 06:55, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- I made a first attempt at rewriting the lead. Feedback is welcome! VR talk 17:55, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- Great effort: a bit lengthy, but probably as concise as it can be without accidentally sliding into generalisation. Iskandar323 (talk) 18:31, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- There is no consensus for that, and it lowers the quality of the article. I have reverted it. --Grufo (talk) 19:49, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- There is no consensus for Grufo's revert. I think there is a consensus for the improved lead section, which addresses both the POV problem with Grufo's rewrite of the lead, and also provides much-needed summary of the article. Well done.-- Toddy1 (talk) 20:00, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- A revert of a disputed content does not need consensus. What we usually do in that case is leaving the status quo and beginning a dispute – although it is really the last thing I want to do. I have now also added to the page content from Vice regent's new page Concubinage (legal term), so that we can balance the current unbalance problem of giving too much weight to history. --Grufo (talk) 20:19, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- I have never even edited Concubinage (legal term).VR talk 20:22, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- A revert of a disputed content does not need consensus. What we usually do in that case is leaving the status quo and beginning a dispute – although it is really the last thing I want to do. I have now also added to the page content from Vice regent's new page Concubinage (legal term), so that we can balance the current unbalance problem of giving too much weight to history. --Grufo (talk) 20:19, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- There is no consensus for Grufo's revert. I think there is a consensus for the improved lead section, which addresses both the POV problem with Grufo's rewrite of the lead, and also provides much-needed summary of the article. Well done.-- Toddy1 (talk) 20:00, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- Grufo is right, this is too apologist.--Ever Grounded (talk) 20:56, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- Ever Grounded, if you feel that some sentences should be reworded, please could you use this talk page to propose changes.-- Toddy1 (talk) 21:04, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
Edit warring
I have brought the current edit warring to Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Edit warring. --Grufo (talk) 21:48, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- For the record, Grufo was blocked for 72 hrs for bringing this vexatious complaint to WP:AN3 in a case of WP:BOOMERANG. Iskandar323 (talk) 06:07, 1 November 2021 (UTC)
"Jurisdictions"
Grufo recently added a large section called jurisdictions at the very top of the article. To me this makes little sense. For one it is totally WP:UNDUE here and most articles on concubinage either barely mention 21st century legal implications or don't mention them at all. Secondly, this section seems to be sourced to dictionaries[21][22] and what appears to be a blog[23]. The secondary sources it does cite seem to say that "concubinage" is not actually used in the present day. So why are we giving so much weight to this? VR talk 20:39, 31 October 2021 (UTC)
- So yes, they copied that (unattributed) from the Concubinage (legal term), which I created specifically as a catchall for this sort of pre-modern to modern legal trivia to remove the necessity for it on the main Concubinage page. On the note of legal blogs, I would note that blogs in general are not automatically considered to be unreliable, and in the case of legal blogs, not only do lawyers not tend to misrepresent legal facts, but these types of blogs are typically less blog and more a place where reliable legal opinions or perspectives are posted. If you check the blog post, you will also note that it is heavily referenced, so in of itself is an invaluable reference for anyone seeking more detailed information. But as you note, from my initial reading, few legal systems lend much weight to the specific term "concubinage" - largely because it is obviously mildly offensive by modern standards as a term for cohabitation (when you can just say cohabitation). For some reason the precise etymology of concubinage appears to be missing even from the concubinatus page, but it is from Latin concubina, from con- ‘with’ + cubare ‘to lie’ - so explictly sexual in nature, as compared to the more agnostic 'cohabitation'. Iskandar323 (talk) 06:23, 1 November 2021 (UTC)
revert
With this edit, Editor Toddy1 reverted a Monkbot edit with the edit summary unhelpful. it is a recipe for cite conflicts
. Explain how that is, please.
Before the Monkbot edit, this article was (and now is again) a member of Category:CS1 maint: ref duplicates default. Articles are listed in that category when the value assigned to |ref=
in a cs1|2 template (in this case {{cite encyclopedia}}
) is the same as the value that the cs1|2 template would create for itself. Here is the original {{cite encyclopedia}}
template with |ref={{sfnRef|Rodriguez|2011}}
:
{{cite encyclopedia |title=Slavery in the Modern World: A History of Political, Social, and Economic Oppression |entry=Concubines |editor-first1=Junius P. |editor-last1=Rodriguez |page=203 |publisher=[[ABC-CLIO]]| year=2011| ref = {{sfnRef|Rodriguez|2011}}}}
- Rodriguez, Junius P., ed. (2011). "Concubines". Slavery in the Modern World: A History of Political, Social, and Economic Oppression. ABC-CLIO. p. 203.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
- Rodriguez, Junius P., ed. (2011). "Concubines". Slavery in the Modern World: A History of Political, Social, and Economic Oppression. ABC-CLIO. p. 203.
When Module:Citation/CS1 (the engine that underlies all cs1|2 templates) is finished processing the template, this is what it hands-off to MediaWiki for final rendering:
'"`UNIQ--templatestyles-00000022-QINU`"'<cite id="CITEREFRodriguez2011" class="citation encyclopaedia cs1">Rodriguez, Junius P., ed. (2011). "Concubines". ''Slavery in the Modern World: A History of Political, Social, and Economic Oppression''. [[ABC-CLIO]]. p. 203.</cite><span title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=bookitem&rft.atitle=Concubines&rft.btitle=Slavery+in+the+Modern+World%3A+A+History+of+Political%2C+Social%2C+and+Economic+Oppression&rft.pages=203&rft.pub=ABC-CLIO&rft.date=2011&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3ATalk%3AConcubinage%2FArchive+2" class="Z3988"></span><span class="cs1-maint citation-comment"><code class="cs1-code">{{[[Template:cite encyclopedia|cite encyclopedia]]}}</code>: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default ([[:Category:CS1 maint: ref duplicates default|link]])</span>
Here is the same {{cite encyclopedia}}
template after the monkbot edit:
{{cite encyclopedia |title=Slavery in the Modern World: A History of Political, Social, and Economic Oppression |entry=Concubines |editor-first1=Junius P. |editor-last1=Rodriguez |page=203 |publisher=[[ABC-CLIO]]| year=2011}}
- Rodriguez, Junius P., ed. (2011). "Concubines". Slavery in the Modern World: A History of Political, Social, and Economic Oppression. ABC-CLIO. p. 203.
and what Module:Citation/CS1 hands-off to MediaWiki:
'"`UNIQ--templatestyles-00000026-QINU`"'<cite id="CITEREFRodriguez2011" class="citation encyclopaedia cs1">Rodriguez, Junius P., ed. (2011). "Concubines". ''Slavery in the Modern World: A History of Political, Social, and Economic Oppression''. [[ABC-CLIO]]. p. 203.</cite><span title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=bookitem&rft.atitle=Concubines&rft.btitle=Slavery+in+the+Modern+World%3A+A+History+of+Political%2C+Social%2C+and+Economic+Oppression&rft.pages=203&rft.pub=ABC-CLIO&rft.date=2011&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fen.wikipedia.org%3ATalk%3AConcubinage%2FArchive+2" class="Z3988"></span>
The output from both versions of the template is exactly the same except for the TemplateStyles stripmarkers and the original has the link to Category:CS1 maint: ref duplicates default. Note that the <cite>
tag content is exactly the same in both versions of the template:
<cite id="CITEREFRodriguez2011" class="citation encyclopaedia cs1">
The id=CITEREFRodriguez2011
attribute is automatically created when |ref=
is omitted or is empty. |ref={{sfnRef|Rodriguez|2011}}
is redundant in this case because it creates the same value for the id=
attribute:
CITEREFRodriguez2011
←{{sfnRef|Rodriguez|2011}}
Please explain how the Montbot edit was unhelpful
. Please explain how the Monkbot edit is a recipe for cite conflicts
.
—Trappist the monk (talk) 18:06, 21 November 2021 (UTC)
I don't get the explanation, but I was also wondering why it was unhelpful. Incidentally, how and why do these |ref= functions appear in the templates in the first place? Iskandar323 (talk) 18:54, 21 November 2021 (UTC)
- What about the explanation above don't you get?
- Before the 18 April 2020 update to Module:Citation/CS1, cs1 templates required
|ref=harv
or|ref=
or{{sfnref|...}}
|ref=CITEREF...
(plaintext) to createid=CITEREF...
anchor id attributes suitable for use with{{sfn}}
and the{{harv}}
family of short-form templates. From 18 April 2020, all cs1 templates automatically createid=CITEREF...
anchor id attributes from the first four names in the contributor-, author-, or editor-name lists (in that order; names from different lists not mixed) and year from|year=
or|date=
. - For this particular example, the original citation had
|ref={{sfnRef|Slavery in the Modern World: A History of Political, Social, and Economic Oppression|2011}}
which was created at this edit. That template was replaced with|ref={{sfnRef|Rodriguez|2011}}
at this edit. - —Trappist the monk (talk) 19:33, 21 November 2021 (UTC)
Ah ok, there was an update that obseleted the old function. Thanks. Iskandar323 (talk) 20:25, 21 November 2021 (UTC)
Because Editor Toddy1 has declined to participate in this discussion, I have restored the monkbot edit that that editor reverted.