Hypergamy reconsidered: Marriage in England, 1837-2021.

It is widely believed that women value social status in marital partners more than men, leading to female marital hypergamy ("marrying up"), and more female intergenerational social mobility. Using evidence from more than 33 million marriages and 67 million births in England 1837-2021 we s...

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Main Authors: Gregory Clark, Neil Cummins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0316769
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author Gregory Clark
Neil Cummins
author_facet Gregory Clark
Neil Cummins
author_sort Gregory Clark
collection DOAJ
description It is widely believed that women value social status in marital partners more than men, leading to female marital hypergamy ("marrying up"), and more female intergenerational social mobility. Using evidence from more than 33 million marriages and 67 million births in England 1837-2021 we show that within this era there was never significant hypergamous marriage by women. The average status of women's fathers equaled that of their husbands' fathers. For marriages 1912-2007 the average social status of female surnames equaled that of male. This was true also for parent surnames of children. Consistent with this, there was no differential tendency in England of men and women to marry by family status. There is also ancillary evidence that physical attraction cannot have been the significant determinant of matching in marriages in any period 1837-2021, based on the very strong correlation observed in underlying social status for marital partners throughout these years.
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spelling doaj-art-ceb84ed32abf49418eaef0b8d22f39632025-02-09T05:30:40ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01202e031676910.1371/journal.pone.0316769Hypergamy reconsidered: Marriage in England, 1837-2021.Gregory ClarkNeil CumminsIt is widely believed that women value social status in marital partners more than men, leading to female marital hypergamy ("marrying up"), and more female intergenerational social mobility. Using evidence from more than 33 million marriages and 67 million births in England 1837-2021 we show that within this era there was never significant hypergamous marriage by women. The average status of women's fathers equaled that of their husbands' fathers. For marriages 1912-2007 the average social status of female surnames equaled that of male. This was true also for parent surnames of children. Consistent with this, there was no differential tendency in England of men and women to marry by family status. There is also ancillary evidence that physical attraction cannot have been the significant determinant of matching in marriages in any period 1837-2021, based on the very strong correlation observed in underlying social status for marital partners throughout these years.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0316769
spellingShingle Gregory Clark
Neil Cummins
Hypergamy reconsidered: Marriage in England, 1837-2021.
PLoS ONE
title Hypergamy reconsidered: Marriage in England, 1837-2021.
title_full Hypergamy reconsidered: Marriage in England, 1837-2021.
title_fullStr Hypergamy reconsidered: Marriage in England, 1837-2021.
title_full_unstemmed Hypergamy reconsidered: Marriage in England, 1837-2021.
title_short Hypergamy reconsidered: Marriage in England, 1837-2021.
title_sort hypergamy reconsidered marriage in england 1837 2021
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0316769
work_keys_str_mv AT gregoryclark hypergamyreconsideredmarriageinengland18372021
AT neilcummins hypergamyreconsideredmarriageinengland18372021