Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dishu_system> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 64 of
64
with 100 triples per page.
- Dishu_system abstract "Dishu (Chinese: 嫡庶) was an important legal and moral system involving marriage and inheritance in ancient East Asia.Because upper-class men in ancient China, Korea and Japan often have more than one spouse to ensure birthing of an heir to their lands, properties and titles, a priority system was created to rank the offsprings' entitlement to inheritance. Under this system, a man was allowed one official wife, called a zhengshi (正室, pronounced seishitsu in Japanese, lit. \"formal household\") or Di wife (嫡妻), and her son was called the Di son (嫡子). In Tang Dynasty, any man who has more than one Di wives would be considered engaging illegal marriage, liable to one year of penal labor, and the woman involved would also receive a slightly less severe punishment unless she could prove being cheated into the marriage. Either case, the marriage would be annulled.A secondary spouse was called a ceshi (側室, lit. \"side household\") or Shu wife (庶妻), and her son was called the Shu son (庶子). Di sons, regardless of their age, held much higher social status than the Shu sons, and the eldest Di son (嫡長子) held overriding priority over all other children of the house. An illegitimate son, born out of wedlock, was generally categorized as a Shu son, though he would have much lower status than those born to legitimate Shu wives.Tang dynasty law in China prescribed that if a Di son died, his eldest Di son (Di grandson) should be the successor, prioritized over all other members of the family; if a Di grandson could not be found, the Di son's next full-brother (born of the same zhengshi mother) should be the successor. If no Di offspring were available, a Shu son could be considered.During most of the imperial China, a man could not divorce or demote a zhengshi wife (以妻為妾) unless she had committed \"seven misconducts for divorce\" (七出).Unfilial conducts (不順父母) — considered a sin as it is \"immoral\" (逆德)Incapable of bearing sons (無子) — considered a sin as it \"threatens bloodlines\" (絕世)Promiscuity (淫) — considered a sin as it \"disrupts clan\" (亂族)Jealousy (妒) — considered a sin as it \"disrupts family\" (亂家)Having severe illness (有惡疾) — considered a sin as it \"hinders family rituals\" (不可共粢盛)Excessive gossiping (口多言) — considered a sin as it \"instigates discord among relatives\" (離親)Theft (竊盜) — considered a sin as it is \"against common good\" (反義)However, there were three conditions, known as \"three exceptions\" (三不去), that forbade a man from ever divorcing his wife even if she commits the above seven sins.The wife has no parental family to return to after divorce (有所娶無所歸)The wife has served three years of filial mourning for deceased parent(s)-in-law (與更三年喪)The husband was poor upon marriage but now wealthy (前貧賤後富貴)The Tang law prescribed that a man caught demoting his zhengshi wife to ceshi without good cause would be sentenced to two years of penal labor, and the zhengshi wife's status would be restored. Any man who divorced his wife without legitimate reasons (the above-mentioned \"seven misconducts\") would be subjected to eighteen months of penal labor, and a further 100 strikes of caning if he violated the wife's protection under \"three exceptions\".After the Song Dynasty, the difference between social status of Di and Shu wives/sons decreased.".
- Dishu_system wikiPageID "42051349".
- Dishu_system wikiPageLength "4593".
- Dishu_system wikiPageOutDegree "33".
- Dishu_system wikiPageRevisionID "696824551".
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Annulment.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Caning.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Catastrophic_illness.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chinese_law.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Category:Inheritance.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Category:Legal_history.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Category:Marriage.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Category:Polygyny.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sexuality_and_society.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Category:Social_history_of_China.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Category:Social_history_of_Japan.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Common_good.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Concubinage.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink East_Asia.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Filial_mourning_(East_Asia).
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Filial_piety.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Gossip.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink History_of_China.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Japan.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Korea.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Inheritance.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Jealousy.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Legitimacy_(family_law).
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Penal_labour.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Polygyny.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Promiscuity.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Seishitsu.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Sex_selection.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Song_dynasty.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Tang_dynasty.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLink Theft.
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLinkText "''shu'' son".
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dishu system".
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shu son".
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLinkText "dishu system".
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLinkText "legitimate".
- Dishu_system wikiPageWikiLinkText "shu".
- Dishu_system links "no".
- Dishu_system s "嫡庶".
- Dishu_system wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Law-stub.
- Dishu_system wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Dishu_system wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Zh.
- Dishu_system subject Category:Chinese_law.
- Dishu_system subject Category:Inheritance.
- Dishu_system subject Category:Legal_history.
- Dishu_system subject Category:Marriage.
- Dishu_system subject Category:Polygyny.
- Dishu_system subject Category:Sexuality_and_society.
- Dishu_system subject Category:Social_history_of_China.
- Dishu_system subject Category:Social_history_of_Japan.
- Dishu_system hypernym System.
- Dishu_system comment "Dishu (Chinese: 嫡庶) was an important legal and moral system involving marriage and inheritance in ancient East Asia.Because upper-class men in ancient China, Korea and Japan often have more than one spouse to ensure birthing of an heir to their lands, properties and titles, a priority system was created to rank the offsprings' entitlement to inheritance. Under this system, a man was allowed one official wife, called a zhengshi (正室, pronounced seishitsu in Japanese, lit.".
- Dishu_system label "Dishu system".
- Dishu_system sameAs Q10944011.
- Dishu_system sameAs m.0_v4bzd.
- Dishu_system sameAs Q10944011.
- Dishu_system sameAs 嫡庶.
- Dishu_system wasDerivedFrom Dishu_system?oldid=696824551.
- Dishu_system isPrimaryTopicOf Dishu_system.