Online Encyclopedia

AFFINITY (Lat. affinitas, relationshi...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 301 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AFFINITY (
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Lat. affinitas, relationship by
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marriage, from offinis, bordering on, related to; finis, border, boundary)
  , in law, as distinguished from consanguinity (q.v.), the
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term applied to. the relation which each party to a
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marriage, the
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husband and wife, bears to the kindred of the other . Affinity is usually de-scribed as of three kinds . (I)
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Direct: that relationship which subsists between the husband and his wife's relations by
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blood or between the wife and the husband's relations by blood . The marriagehaving made them one person, the blood relations of each are held as related by affinity in the same degree to the one spouseas by consanguinity to the other . But the relation is only with the married parties themselves; and does not bring those in affinity with them in affinity with each other; so a wife's
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sister has no affinity to her husband's
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brother . This is (2) Secondary affinity . (3) Collateral affinity is the relationship subsisting between the husband and the relations of his wife's relations . The subject is chiefly important from the matrimonial prohibitions by which the
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canon law has restricted relations by affinity . Taking the table of degrees within which marriage is prohibited on account of consanguinity, the
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rule has been thus extended to affinity, so that wherever relationship to a man himself would be a bar to marriage, relationship to his deceased wife will be the same bar, and
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vice versa on the husband's decease . Briefly, direct affinity is a bar to marriage . This rule has been founded chiefly on interpretations of the eighteenth chapter of
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Leviticus . Formerly by law in England, marriages within the degrees of affinity were not absolutely null, but they were liable to be annulled by ecclesiastical
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process during the lives of both parties; in other words, the incapacity was only a canonical, not a
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civil,
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disability .

By the Marriage

Act 1835 all marriages of this kind not disputed before the passing of the act were declared absolutely valid, while all subsequent to it were declared null . This rendered null in England, and not merely voidable, a marriage with a deceased wife's sister or niece .

End of Article: AFFINITY (Lat. affinitas, relationship by marriage, from offinis, bordering on, related to; finis, border, boundary)
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