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Woman, Church, and State: Woman, Church, and State

Woman, Church, and State
Woman, Church, and State
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Preface
  2. I. The Matriarchate
  3. II. Celibacy
  4. III. Canon Law
  5. IV. Marquette
  6. V. Witchcraft
  7. VI. Wives
  8. VII. Polygamy
  9. VIII. Woman And Work
  10. IX. The Church Of To-Day
  11. X. Past, Present, Future

[←23]

In the Rig-Veda, a work not committed to writing until after that movement of the Aryans, which resulted in the establishment of Persia and India. * * there is nothing more striking than the status of woman at that early age. Then the departed mothers were served as faithfully by the younger members of the family as departed fathers. The mother quite as often, if not more frequently than the father, conducted the services of the dead ancestry, which took place three times a day, often consisting of improvised poetry.--Elizabeth Peabody on the Aryans.

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