14. In what instances Marriages between Relatives shall be regulated
by the Laws of Nature: and in what instances by the civil Laws. The Spirit of the Laws | ||
Footnotes
[31]
This law is very ancient among them. Attila, says Priscus, in his embassy stopped in a certain place to marry Esca his daughter. "A thing permitted," he adds, "by the laws of the Scythians," p. 22.
[35]
It was thus at Rome in the first ages, till the people made a law to permit them; they were willing to favour a man extremely popular, who had married his cousin-german. Plutarch's treatise entitled "Questions Concerning the Affairs of the Romans."
[36]
"Collection of Voyages to the Indies," vol. v, part 1. An account of the state of the isle of Formosa.
14. In what instances Marriages between Relatives shall be regulated
by the Laws of Nature: and in what instances by the civil Laws. The Spirit of the Laws | ||