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    PoalackJokes88 (poalackjokes88@poa.st)'s status on Thursday, 12-Dec-2024 01:39:03 JSTPoalackJokes88PoalackJokes88
    in reply to
    • Woodshop ?
    • The Daily Stormer Digest
    @DailyStormerDigest @WoodshopHandman >You finding the age women starting marrying and having children throughout all of history until the 20th century weird is not my problem.

    But it's not.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_European_marriage_pattern
    >"On average first marriages took place around the middle twenties for both genders, with men marrying at slightly older ages than women, and only setting up a nuclear household when they were financially stable enough to care for a household, all of this preceded by time working as servants, farmhands or apprentices. Also, a significant proportion of women married after their twenties and 20–30% of women never married.[9][10][11]"

    >"According to “English Population History from Family Reconstitution, 1530-1837”, the average ages at marriage in the early 19th century were around 25 years for men and 23.5 years for women.

    If you read biographies of any European royalty, which is easy to find, they commonly get married in their 20s or even 30s. Women getting an arranged marriage while they're young is more a custom of India and the Middle East, and most of the Europeans / American settlers who liked doing it were Puritans who were basically larping as jews.
    In conversationabout 5 months ago from gnusocial.jppermalink

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      Western European marriage pattern
      The Western European marriage pattern is a family and demographic pattern that is marked by comparatively late marriage (in the middle twenties), especially for women, with a generally small age difference between the spouses, a significant proportion of women who remain unmarried, and the establishment of a neolocal household after the couple has married. In 1965, John Hajnal posited that Europe could be divided into two areas characterized by a different patterns of nuptiality. To the west of the line, which extends approximately between Saint Petersburg, Russia, and Trieste, Italy, marriage rates and thus fertility were comparatively low and a significant minority of women married late or remained single and most families were nuclear; to the east of the line and in the Mediterranean and particular regions of Northwestern Europe, early marriage and extended family homes were the norm and high fertility was countered by high mortality.In the 20th century, Hajnal's observations were assumed as valid by a wide variety of sociologists. However, since the early 21st century, his theory has been routinely criticized and rejected by scholars...
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