In Tibet, polyandry (marriage of
one woman to more than one husband) was accepted. Brothers would marry one
woman, and the children of the marriage would inherit the land. The term for
polyandry where the husbands are brothers to each other is fraternal polyandry.
Like many cultural customs,
polyandry in Tibet was compatible with specific challenges of geography. In a
country where there was little tillable land, the practice of polyandry would
reduce the number of heirs, because a woman has more biological limits on the
number of children she can have, than a man does. Thus, the land would stay
within the same family, undivided. The marriage of brothers to the same woman
would ensure that brothers stayed on the land together to work that land,
providing for more adult male labor. The practice would also ensure that if one
husband needed to travel -- for instance, for trade purposes -- another husband
would remain with the family and land.
Polyandry is now against the law
in Tibet, though it is occasionally still practiced. Historically, the social system
compelled marriage within a social class. Initially, when the People's
Republic of China annexed Tibet, political systems in many regions of Tibet
remained unchanged. Then starting between 1959 and 1960 political reforms
changed the land ownership and taxation systems. Professor Melvyn Goldstein
believed this had a direct impact on Tibet's traditional marriage system.
A Tibet woman with her two husbands
Source from google image
it's pretty informative and short essay. thanks:)
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