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| 25. Childeric. The Spirit of the Laws | ||
"The laws of matrimony amongst the Germans," says Tacitus, "are strictly observed. Vice is not there a subject of ridicule. To corrupt or be corrupted is not called fashion, or the custom of the age: [36] there are few examples in this populous nation of the violation of conjugal faith." [37]
This was the reason of the expulsion of Childeric: he shocked their rigid virtue, which conquest had not had time to corrupt.
| 25. Childeric. The Spirit of the Laws | ||