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Houses,heirs, and non-heirs in the adour valley: Social and geographic mobility in the nineteenth-century
Institution:1. The Hong Kong Jockey Club Centre for Suicide Research and Prevention, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong;2. Department of Social Work and Social Administration, Faculty of Social Sciences, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong;1. Vidyasirimedhi Institute of Science and Technology, Wangchan Valley, Rayong, Thailand;2. School of Business, State University of New York, 117A South Hall, Geneseo, USA
Abstract:“Providing for the children's future” is a problem that parents should solve by the time children reach adulthood. In the case of a peasant family, the solution involved giving children part of the estate. In the Pyrénées, landownership as well as social status were bequathed to a single heir, while the other children had to leave the family house. What became of these others and where do they go? A small village from the Adour plain has been chosen to show how the system functioned during the nineteenth century, which was replete with economic crises. The study shows that roles and the duties connected with them changed during this century: internalization of local social norms was no longer going to be as successful as in the past. Also, the meaning of the family changed. Earlier, a simple domestic group working for the House, the family began to take on more autonomy as a production unit and started a long trend towards being a haven, a protector of the weak, old and unmarried members of the family.
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