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~Wife Exchange~
Heathcliff
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Heathcliff
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~Venus Praetorian~
~Wife Exchange~
on:
August 12, 2015, 08:25:29 AM
~~~
It's true Eskimo men sometimes let other men sleep with their wives. But did they offer that privilege to any horny schmuck who showed up on the front stoop? Generally not. The lending of wives to perfect strangers happened occasionally in some places, but it was never the widespread custom it has been made out to be.
There were several contexts in which a husband would let another man sleep with his wife. The most widespread was ritual spouse exchange, practiced in one form or another in every region where Eskimos lived, from eastern Greenland to the Bering Sea. This sort of spouse exchange was always associated with a religious purpose, and was always done at the instigation of an angekok (shaman). Often the point was to effect some desired outcome, such as better weather or hunting conditions.
The best known example of ritual spouse exchange was the "putting-out-of-the-lamps game" played in Greenland. This was a sort of combination of seven minutes in heaven, Roman orgy, and prayer meeting. The prayer-meeting aspect failed to overcome the objections of the early Christian missionaries, one of whom called it the "whore game." Those guys really know how to ruin a party. To play at home: gather together a number of married couples (according to some sources, singles could play too); wait for the angekok to contact the spirits; turn out the lights; screw a random member of the opposite six; turn on the lights. The idea seemed to be that the spirits would be more willing to cooperate if you did it that way. Who are we to disappoint the spirits? This game was played only in Greenland, but other spouse-exchange rituals were practiced elsewhere. One example from Alaska was called the "bladder feast," which sounds a bit less appetizing. (Despite the name, the bladders weren't eaten, and six was only a minor part of the festivities).
Another type of wife-sharing had nothing to to do with religion, but it wasn't just about six either. This was reciprocal spouse exchange, sometimes described as co-marriage. It was found in all or almost all areas inhabited by the Eskimos, although it was rare in some regions. Even in areas where it was common, many couples did not participate. Co-marriage was not entered into lightly since it usually resulted in lifelong bonds amongst all members of both families. Besides the obvious motive of six with a new partner, the purpose was to strengthen economic and friendship bonds between the two families, who could depend on each other in times of need.
Generally each married couple maintained its own household. Every so often, each man would move into the household of the other couple (often in another village), taking over the other man's responsibilities, rights, and privileges. The practice is often called "wife exchange," but more logically it should be "husband exchange" since it was almost always the husbands who changed places. The exchange might last any length of time, with a week or so being typical. The husbands would then move back to their own houses until the exchange was repeated, which might be in a few months, or maybe never. The family-type bonds remained in force even in cases where the actual exchange was made only once. Participating couples might have such arrangements with one other couple or with several.
Now we come to the meat of the question: wife-lending, in which the husband let another man sleep with his wife without getting access to the other man's wife in return. The popular conception is that it was a matter of common hospitality to offer this service to any man traveling without his own wife. This is certainly not an accurate interpretation. As far as I can tell, no Eskimo male was ever expected to offer his wife to a visitor, and nowhere did it happen as a matter of course. Most Eskimo men traveled with their wives so it wouldn't come up very often anyway. Husbands did occasionally volunteer to lend their wives to visitors, but there seems to have been a general aversion to doing so. If, on the other hand, a guest brashly asked to borrow the wife, the rules of hospitality might make it hard to refuse. It would usually be considered rude to make the request, however. If the host had more than one wife (roughly one in ten did), he might be more willing to offer one of them to a guest, but that was still not the universal custom. If a traveler was offered his host's wife it was usually implicit that the host would have access to the guest's wife at some time in the future.
Sometimes an unmarried woman, usually a widow, would be offered (or would offer herself) to the traveler. Unmarried people of both sixes had considerable sixual freedom, and nobody thought less of them for exercising that freedom. But a traveler hoping to find an unmarried woman to exercise with might have been disappointed since there weren't very many of them. Girls tended to marry as soon as they reached sixual maturity, and widows and divorced women usually remarried quickly.
The common Western misconception of widespread wife-lending to unfamiliar travelers may have several roots. The practice was apparently more common among the Aleuts than Eskimos, and these two groups have often been lumped together. Aleuts are not really Eskimos, but they are related and sometimes described as "Eskimoid" (which just sounds silly to me). Another factor we can never overlook is Western misinterpretation. If an early missionary saw a strange (to him) Eskimo offered someone else's wife, he might assume he was a stranger to the host's family as well. But this could easily have been a case of co-marriage with a distant family. Finally, it may be that Eskimo men were more inclined to offer their wives to unfamiliar white men than to unfamiliar Eskimos. There are frequent reports (by whites) that Eskimo men wanted their wives to sleep with white men in order to make fine sons. I can't help suspecting that was an ego-boosting self-delusion on the part of the whites, but such reports are common enough that they can't be entirely dismissed.
The idea that all these customs are a cure for sixual jealousy couldn't be further from the truth. Keep in mind that husbands let their wives sleep only with men of their choosing, not every man who wanted her. When a man traveled away from home, he would take his wife with him if at all possible, partly to keep her from sleeping with random men. If for any reason the wife couldn't accompany him on a trip, he would usually leave her in the care of a trusted friend (who would normally expect sixual access to her in return) or a relative (who would not). If he left her alone he ran the risk not only that any number of other men might try to sleep with her, but that one of them would marry her. (Bride capture of either single or married women was a common means of obtaining a wife.) Infidelity, defined here as sixual relations outside marriage and without the spouse's permission, was a serious matter. Murder of one man by another was not uncommon in traditional Eskimo society, and jealousy over women was probably the single leading motive. Divorce was also common, especially among couples who had no children, and infidelity was a common cause.
An obvious question is how the wives felt about being swapped. The evidence is sketchy, because most Western observers apparently didn't think it was an important question. The little information available indicates that the women were usually willing--if not always enthusiastic--participants. They had, at least in theory, a veto power over all such arrangements, but exercising that power might lead to her husband beating her. As a last resort, women (and men) had an absolute right to divorce, simply by moving out of the house or by kicking the spouse out.
~credits to the source
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Last Edit: August 12, 2015, 10:02:30 AM by Schy
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~ Amor Gignit Amorem. ~
razorsharp
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moments of intimacy, laughter and kinship
Re: ~Wife Exchange~
Reply #1 on:
August 12, 2015, 11:44:09 PM
potek, wife exchange nga sa eskimo pero paghubo mo naman sa loob ng igloo baka maging frozen popsicle agad si manoy sa lamig. ngiiii.
nice post ms. schy.
«
Last Edit: August 17, 2015, 09:44:17 PM by razorsharp
»
(1 person liked this)
M.I.L.K. is an epic photographic celebration of what it is to be part of a family, share the gift of friendship and more than anything else, to be loved. Inspired by the 1950s landmark photographic exhibition "The Family of Man", M.I.L.K. began as a worldwide search to develop a collection of extraordinary and geographically diverse images portraying humanity’s "Moments of Intimacy, Laughter and Kinship" (M.I.L.K.). This search took the form of a global photographic competition in 1999.
Heathcliff
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~Venus Praetorian~
Re: ~Wife Exchange~
Reply #2 on:
August 13, 2015, 10:55:00 AM
Nyahaha! That's what you call freezing/frozen delights Sir Razor!
Agiginaw talaga dun. .talukbong lang lagi nde pede hubong neykid!
Hehe
~ Amor Gignit Amorem. ~
exiled47
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Re: ~Wife Exchange~
Reply #3 on:
June 28, 2016, 03:02:21 PM
So meron palang history about swingers haha. Nice culture pero buti na lang hindi ako dyan pinanganak. Anyway thanks boss sa pag share good read haha
naruto789544
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Re: ~Wife Exchange~
Reply #4 on:
June 29, 2016, 12:49:32 AM
interesting topic.... i'm intrigued with the wife capture part... dueling might be common here...
Heathcliff
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~Venus Praetorian~
Re: ~Wife Exchange~
Reply #5 on:
June 29, 2016, 09:53:22 PM
widespread pa rin yang wife capture/abduction practice na yan among the southern and eastern asia, some parts in mexico and Africa..actually by tradition, honeymoon is somewhat a relic of marriage by capture practice...
kailangan makabuo na muna, para wala ng sagabal...specially when the couple's parents and relatives do not approve the relationship. Thus, the bride's family will readily accept the marriage arrangement or the union will be dissolved.
~ Amor Gignit Amorem. ~
naruto789544
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Re: ~Wife Exchange~
Reply #6 on:
June 29, 2016, 11:25:07 PM
this is commonly practiced in non christian nations... i agree mam
@Schy
that the practice is still prevalent in rural asia...
(1 person liked this)
whinterwol
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Re: ~Wife Exchange~
Reply #7 on:
August 01, 2016, 09:43:15 PM
Wow fascinating! I didnt know there was such a culture. Thanks sa share at sa baging kaalaman!
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oliverzablan
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Re: ~Wife Exchange~
Reply #8 on:
August 24, 2016, 09:25:34 AM
may wife sharing pala sa culture nila haha!
nice nice story
marielsmith3nder
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Honeybee
Re: ~Wife Exchange~
Reply #9 on:
July 14, 2017, 03:46:34 PM
Ayus itong story na ito sarap pala pumunta dyan kaya lang sabi nga baka maging popsicle sa lamig hahahahaha!!!
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