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The word bastard comes from the Latin word bastardus. The Romans were very serious about contract law. Marriage, in Roman times (and even somewhat in modern times), was a type of business contract. Children born within the bounds of that contract were legitimate, children born outside of the marriage contract were not.
Dec 18, 2017
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Jun 18, 2017 · Today, 'bastard' is used as an insult, or to describe children born to non-marital unions. Being born to unmarried parents is largely free ...
Bastardy, as a legal term, designates the civil condition of a child born under illegitimate circumstances. Under English common law, children born out of ...
Feb 29, 2020 · "bastard" has historically meant "a child born out of wedlock". it's gender-neutral. and it's in disuse! we could use it to mean "nonbinary ...
Conversely, illegitimacy, also known as bastardy, has been the status of a child born outside marriage, such a child being known as a bastard, a love child, a ...
Today we use the term bastard as an insult, or to describe children born outside lawful marriage. Before the thirteenth century, definitions of illegitimate ...
Feb 25, 2013 · It's someone who is born out of wedlock (parents not married to each other). Back in the day, bastard children did not automatically inherit ...
Jan 14, 2007 · a girl, be she legitimate or illegitimate, usually inherits very little of her fathers estate. if she was pretty enough, and publicly accepted/ ...
"Bastard" means any child born out of wedlock, whether the father is known or not. It was once used as a term in law, but I presume that today "illegitimate ...
Nov 7, 2013 · This writer couldn't believe it when someone described her nephew, who was born out-of-wedlock, as a bastard.