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Bundling (tradition)

Bundling, or tarrying, is the traditional practice of wrapping a couple together in a bed sometimes with a board between the two of them, usually as a part of courting behavior. The tradition is thought to have originated either in the Netherlands or in the British Isles and later became common in colonial United States,[1][2] especially in Pennsylvania Dutch Country. Bundling is associated with the Amish as a form of courtship.[3] Some Nebraska Amish may still practice it.

Origin

It is possible the precedent for bundling came from the biblical story of Ruth and Boaz, in which Ruth, a widow, and Boaz, a wealthy landowner, spend a night together in a grain storage room. Tradition says they did not touch, and the pair later got married.[4]

Courtship practice

Bundling, or "bed courting" is believed to have originated in the pre-Celtic populations of the British Isles and was introduced to the American colonies by European immigrants (primarily Dutch and Welsh) where it attained unprecedented popularity.[5][6] Traditionally, the practice of courtship involved two young adults, often betrothed, who spent the night in bed together under the parental roof to ensure compatibility and accountability. A bundling board or bundling sack may make an appearance, as it takes the form of contraceptive for a bundling couple.[6] A bundling board was a large plank that was placed in between the couple and the bundling sack was a sleeping bag that was sewn up the middle. Periods of popularity for the practice of Bundling often align with eras of enhanced social position for women, as this custom afforded a high level of protection against premarital sex.[5]

The custom of bundling, which became common in New England in the eighteenth century, was used to certify that an unwed father was held accountable for an illegitimate pregnancy.[7] The courtship practice would ensure that there would be witnesses to certify any intimacy that took place. Within the seventeenth century, courts were more willing to accept a woman's testimony that a specific man had fathered her child. Stricter standards came about in the eighteenth century when the court officials wanted evidence in support of the woman's allegation, which could be difficult to obtain.[7] If a couple had sex in secret and the woman became pregnant, no witness of the relation would have taken place. Marriage by a spousal contract or in a church would often follow bundling.

In United States

Two forms of bundling in Colonial America are generally discussed: a sleeping arrangement between strangers, or the bed-sharing of lovers under parental supervision.[8][9] The former definition refers to the practice used to accommodate the heavy traffic of travelers in the underdeveloped colonies, often with no implication of sexual activity. The latter, however, refers to the courtship practice which ensured legal accountability for an unwed father in the case of pre-marital pregnancy.[7] The courtship ritual of bundling was primarily observed in rural communities. The measure of familial and community protection which bundling provided against the scandal of abandonment was not offered in urban settings where populations had a much higher degree of mobility and anonymity.[7]

Despite some religious criticism, bundling rose in popularity amongst rural populations throughout the eighteenth century. The prevalence of premarital sex in colonial America is shown by the rate of legitimate births within the first 9 months of marriage; the late eighteenth century observed a remarkable increase in pre-marital pregnancies, with 30-40% of infants born within the first nine months of marriage.[10] This is due in part to a sexually permissive subculture cultivated by parents of the less-wealthy classes. A high correlation is observed between the pre-marital pregnancy status of Mothers and Daughters in the 18th century.[10]

In Colonial United States, Jonathan Edwards and other preachers condemned bundling.[11] American Puritanism condemned the practice of bundling as immoral, or un-Christian.[8][7] The heydey of Bundling in the late 18th century corresponds to a period of low engagement with puritanical ideals, when religious participation for adolescents was not strictly enforced by societal standards. With the Second Great Awakening at the turn of the 19th century, religion became a much larger part of adolescent life and puritanical morals were more heavily enforced by a larger societal group.[12][7] As social opinion moved away from the practical solution of bundling to the ideological solution of abstinence and moral responsibility, the popularity of bundling waned.[7]

It is possible that, as late as the mid-19th century, bundling was still practiced in New York state and perhaps in New England, though its popularity was waning. The court case of Graham v. Smith, 1 Edm.Sel.Cas. 267 (N.Y. 1846), for example, initially argued before Judge Edmunds in the Orange Circuit Court of New York, concerned the seduction of a 19-year-old woman; testimony in the case established that bundling was a common practice in certain rural social circles at the time. By the 20th century, bundling seems to have disappeared almost everywhere, except for the more conservative Old Order Amish affiliations, where it was still in use as of 2006, regardless of location.[13] In the modern United States, practices of "dating" and "necking" might be tied to the previous practice of bundling.[14] Public widespread anxiety about the vulnerability of young women led to new writing which was published in newspapers and magazines during the eighteenth century.[7]

Bundling Outside the United States

The Kwanyama are one of the eight Ambo Bantu tribes that live in Southwest Africa. The courtship practice of bundling is popular amongst the Kwanyama. This practice began within the Kwanyama Ambo tribe during the eighteenth century. Bundling for the Kwanyama does not imply sexual intercourse, but rather the word bundling is okunangala, which means "to sleep together." In South Africa, bundling prevented the birth of illegitimate children. Kwanyama engaged couples bundle under supervision, but illegitimate bundling occurs at night during public gatherings—meaning no witness is present.[14]

Bundling had been reported across the Germanic tribes, the Celts, the Finns and people of the Baltic states. The German-Swiss custom of Kiltgang demonstrates the practice of boys and girls who were at puberty age spending the night in bed together. This practice began in the nineteenth century in Norway and Sweden. The participants were either entirely or partially closed, and sexual intercourse would not occur. The youth were enabled to choose a mate without the interference of their parents.[14]

In the seventeenth century, Jewish society encouraged affection before marriage similar to the practice of allowing engaged couples to spend time in bed together before their wedding. This suggests similarities to bundling practices in early modern France and North America. Bundling within Jewish courtship practices involved some sexual contact short of intercourse. Seventeenth century moralist Isaiah Horowitz denounced this practice, as he was concerned with the sexual transgressions that may occur from romantic affection before the wedding. In the eighteenth century, another moralist Ezekiel Landau reported a case where "Jewish bundling" led to intercourse.[15]

Literature

The writer Washington Irving, in book 3, chapter 7 of A History of New York (1809) as well as other of his works, refers to bundling as a Yankee practice.

This amazing increase may, indeed, be partly ascribed to a singular custom prevalent among them, commonly known by the name of bundling—a superstitious rite observed by the young people of both sexes, with which they usually terminated their festivities, and which was kept up with religious strictness by the more bigoted part of the community.

Historian Edward Shorter wrote in his novel, The Making of the Modern Family, that the widespread increase of illegitimate births through courtship practices comprised a "sexual revolution" that was issued by the rise of industrial capitalism within the eighteenth century.[16]

[17]

Jakob Huizinga, a Mennonite revered who remained on the island of Texel (northwestern part of The Netherlands) from 1844 to 1881 wrote about unlawful premarital sexuality in his diary. Huizinga referred to the "Texel custom" or "night courting" practice that consisted of potential suitors entering an unmarried woman's bedroom at night. Night courting, bundling, or festerln was organized in areas bordering the North Sea as well as the Alps and Baltic region.

In the media

Gabriel Edward Martin, Heath Ledger's character in the 2000 film The Patriot, is bundled when he spends an overnight visit at the home of Anne Patricia Howard (Lisa Brenner), the girl that he is courting.

Anna Gunn's character in the HBO series Deadwood mentions removing a bundling board from their bed in Season 2, Episode 2.

In the TV series Salem during Season 1, Episode 7, "Our Own Private America", adolescent teens are seen bundling.

In the TV series A Discovery of Witches during Season 1, episode 5, Matthew de Clairmont and Diana Bishop discuss the "bundling" custom.

See also

References

  1. ^ History of Sex, Love and Sexuality 1750 America and Bundling, The People's Almanac 1975–1981
  2. ^ Stiles, Henry Reed (2005), Bundling: Its Origin, Progress and Decline (reprint ed.), Kessinger Publishing, ISBN 978-1-4179-8628-6
  3. ^ "Bundling - GAMEO". gameo.org. Retrieved 2022-12-01.
  4. ^ Ruth 3:9–14; 4:13
  5. ^ a b Moller, Herbert (1945). "Sex Composition and Correlated Culture Patterns of Colonial America". The William and Mary Quarterly. 2 (2): 114–153. doi:10.2307/1923515. ISSN 0043-5597.
  6. ^ a b "Courtship, Sex, and the Single Colonist | The Colonial Williamsburg Official History & Citizenship Site". research.colonialwilliamsburg.org. Retrieved 2022-12-08.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Godbeer, Richard (2004). "Courtship and Sexual Freedom in Eighteenth-Century America". OAH Magazine of History. 18 (4): 9–13. ISSN 0882-228X.
  8. ^ a b Stiles, Henry Reed. Bundling; its Origin, Progress, and Decline in America. ISBN 978-3-337-08809-5. OCLC 1189849207.
  9. ^ Grose, Francis (2004). A classical dictionary of the vulgar tongue. Beard Books. ISBN 1-58798-247-1. OCLC 65471926.
  10. ^ a b Smith, Daniel Scott; Hindus, Michael S. (1975). "Premarital Pregnancy in America 1640-1971: An Overview and Interpretation". The Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 5 (4): 537–570. doi:10.2307/202859. ISSN 0022-1953.
  11. ^ Marsden, George (2003). Jonathan Edwards: A Life. Yale University Press. p. 130. ISBN 9780300129946. jonathan edwards bundling.
  12. ^ Smith, Daniel Scott; Hindus, Michael S. (1975). "Premarital Pregnancy in America 1640-1971: An Overview and Interpretation". The Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 5 (4): 537–570. doi:10.2307/202859. ISSN 0022-1953.
  13. ^ Shachtman, p. 10
  14. ^ a b c Loeb, E. M. (1950). "Courtship and the Love Song". Anthropos. 45 (4/6): 821–851. ISSN 0257-9774.
  15. ^ Raphael, Marc Lee, ed. (2020-04-15). Approaches to Modern Judaism. Brown Judaic Studies. doi:10.2307/j.ctvzgb99q.4. ISBN 978-1-951498-44-3.
  16. ^ Cohen, Daniel A. (1997). "The Beautiful Female Murder Victim: Literary Genres and Courtship Practices in the Origins of a Cultural Motif, 1590-1850". Journal of Social History. 31 (2): 277–306. ISSN 0022-4529.
  17. ^ Kok, Jan; Bras, Hilde; Rotering, Paul (2016). "Courtship and Bridal Pregnancy in the Netherlands, 1870-1950". Annales de démographie historique (2 (132)): 165–192. ISSN 0066-2062.

Sources

  • Shachtman, Tom. Rumspringa: To Be or Not to Be Amish. New York: North Point Press (Farrar, Straus and Giroux), 2006.
  • Ekrich, Roger A. At Day's Close: Night in Times Past. Chapter 7, 2005.
  • Walsh, William S.: Handy Book of Curious Information. J. B. Lippincott Company, 1913
  • Little Known Facts about Bundling in the New World by Ammon Monroe Aurand Jr (1895–1956)

External links

  • Folk Lore of the Pennsylvania Germans
  • The Art of Bundling: Being an Inquiry into the Nature and Origins of that Curious but Universal Folk-Custom, with an Exposition of the Rise & Fall of Bundling in the Eastern Part of North America. By Dana Doten, 1938
  • "Bundling" in the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online
  • The original bundlers: Boaz and Ruth, and seventeenth-century English courtship practices – Critical Essay – Journal of Social History, Spring, 2002, by Yochi Fischer-Yinon

bundling, tradition, bundling, tarrying, traditional, practice, wrapping, couple, together, sometimes, with, board, between, them, usually, part, courting, behavior, tradition, thought, have, originated, either, netherlands, british, isles, later, became, comm. Bundling or tarrying is the traditional practice of wrapping a couple together in a bed sometimes with a board between the two of them usually as a part of courting behavior The tradition is thought to have originated either in the Netherlands or in the British Isles and later became common in colonial United States 1 2 especially in Pennsylvania Dutch Country Bundling is associated with the Amish as a form of courtship 3 Some Nebraska Amish may still practice it Contents 1 Origin 2 Courtship practice 3 In United States 4 Bundling Outside the United States 5 Literature 6 In the media 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksOrigin EditIt is possible the precedent for bundling came from the biblical story of Ruth and Boaz in which Ruth a widow and Boaz a wealthy landowner spend a night together in a grain storage room Tradition says they did not touch and the pair later got married 4 Courtship practice EditBundling or bed courting is believed to have originated in the pre Celtic populations of the British Isles and was introduced to the American colonies by European immigrants primarily Dutch and Welsh where it attained unprecedented popularity 5 6 Traditionally the practice of courtship involved two young adults often betrothed who spent the night in bed together under the parental roof to ensure compatibility and accountability A bundling board or bundling sack may make an appearance as it takes the form of contraceptive for a bundling couple 6 A bundling board was a large plank that was placed in between the couple and the bundling sack was a sleeping bag that was sewn up the middle Periods of popularity for the practice of Bundling often align with eras of enhanced social position for women as this custom afforded a high level of protection against premarital sex 5 The custom of bundling which became common in New England in the eighteenth century was used to certify that an unwed father was held accountable for an illegitimate pregnancy 7 The courtship practice would ensure that there would be witnesses to certify any intimacy that took place Within the seventeenth century courts were more willing to accept a woman s testimony that a specific man had fathered her child Stricter standards came about in the eighteenth century when the court officials wanted evidence in support of the woman s allegation which could be difficult to obtain 7 If a couple had sex in secret and the woman became pregnant no witness of the relation would have taken place Marriage by a spousal contract or in a church would often follow bundling In United States EditTwo forms of bundling in Colonial America are generally discussed a sleeping arrangement between strangers or the bed sharing of lovers under parental supervision 8 9 The former definition refers to the practice used to accommodate the heavy traffic of travelers in the underdeveloped colonies often with no implication of sexual activity The latter however refers to the courtship practice which ensured legal accountability for an unwed father in the case of pre marital pregnancy 7 The courtship ritual of bundling was primarily observed in rural communities The measure of familial and community protection which bundling provided against the scandal of abandonment was not offered in urban settings where populations had a much higher degree of mobility and anonymity 7 Despite some religious criticism bundling rose in popularity amongst rural populations throughout the eighteenth century The prevalence of premarital sex in colonial America is shown by the rate of legitimate births within the first 9 months of marriage the late eighteenth century observed a remarkable increase in pre marital pregnancies with 30 40 of infants born within the first nine months of marriage 10 This is due in part to a sexually permissive subculture cultivated by parents of the less wealthy classes A high correlation is observed between the pre marital pregnancy status of Mothers and Daughters in the 18th century 10 In Colonial United States Jonathan Edwards and other preachers condemned bundling 11 American Puritanism condemned the practice of bundling as immoral or un Christian 8 7 The heydey of Bundling in the late 18th century corresponds to a period of low engagement with puritanical ideals when religious participation for adolescents was not strictly enforced by societal standards With the Second Great Awakening at the turn of the 19th century religion became a much larger part of adolescent life and puritanical morals were more heavily enforced by a larger societal group 12 7 As social opinion moved away from the practical solution of bundling to the ideological solution of abstinence and moral responsibility the popularity of bundling waned 7 It is possible that as late as the mid 19th century bundling was still practiced in New York state and perhaps in New England though its popularity was waning The court case of Graham v Smith 1 Edm Sel Cas 267 N Y 1846 for example initially argued before Judge Edmunds in the Orange Circuit Court of New York concerned the seduction of a 19 year old woman testimony in the case established that bundling was a common practice in certain rural social circles at the time By the 20th century bundling seems to have disappeared almost everywhere except for the more conservative Old Order Amish affiliations where it was still in use as of 2006 update regardless of location 13 In the modern United States practices of dating and necking might be tied to the previous practice of bundling 14 Public widespread anxiety about the vulnerability of young women led to new writing which was published in newspapers and magazines during the eighteenth century 7 Bundling Outside the United States EditThe Kwanyama are one of the eight Ambo Bantu tribes that live in Southwest Africa The courtship practice of bundling is popular amongst the Kwanyama This practice began within the Kwanyama Ambo tribe during the eighteenth century Bundling for the Kwanyama does not imply sexual intercourse but rather the word bundling is okunangala which means to sleep together In South Africa bundling prevented the birth of illegitimate children Kwanyama engaged couples bundle under supervision but illegitimate bundling occurs at night during public gatherings meaning no witness is present 14 Bundling had been reported across the Germanic tribes the Celts the Finns and people of the Baltic states The German Swiss custom of Kiltgang demonstrates the practice of boys and girls who were at puberty age spending the night in bed together This practice began in the nineteenth century in Norway and Sweden The participants were either entirely or partially closed and sexual intercourse would not occur The youth were enabled to choose a mate without the interference of their parents 14 In the seventeenth century Jewish society encouraged affection before marriage similar to the practice of allowing engaged couples to spend time in bed together before their wedding This suggests similarities to bundling practices in early modern France and North America Bundling within Jewish courtship practices involved some sexual contact short of intercourse Seventeenth century moralist Isaiah Horowitz denounced this practice as he was concerned with the sexual transgressions that may occur from romantic affection before the wedding In the eighteenth century another moralist Ezekiel Landau reported a case where Jewish bundling led to intercourse 15 Literature EditThe writer Washington Irving in book 3 chapter 7 of A History of New York 1809 as well as other of his works refers to bundling as a Yankee practice This amazing increase may indeed be partly ascribed to a singular custom prevalent among them commonly known by the name of bundling a superstitious rite observed by the young people of both sexes with which they usually terminated their festivities and which was kept up with religious strictness by the more bigoted part of the community Historian Edward Shorter wrote in his novel The Making of the Modern Family that the widespread increase of illegitimate births through courtship practices comprised a sexual revolution that was issued by the rise of industrial capitalism within the eighteenth century 16 17 Jakob Huizinga a Mennonite revered who remained on the island of Texel northwestern part of The Netherlands from 1844 to 1881 wrote about unlawful premarital sexuality in his diary Huizinga referred to the Texel custom or night courting practice that consisted of potential suitors entering an unmarried woman s bedroom at night Night courting bundling or festerln was organized in areas bordering the North Sea as well as the Alps and Baltic region In the media EditGabriel Edward Martin Heath Ledger s character in the 2000 film The Patriot is bundled when he spends an overnight visit at the home of Anne Patricia Howard Lisa Brenner the girl that he is courting Anna Gunn s character in the HBO series Deadwood mentions removing a bundling board from their bed in Season 2 Episode 2 In the TV series Salem during Season 1 Episode 7 Our Own Private America adolescent teens are seen bundling In the TV series A Discovery of Witches during Season 1 episode 5 Matthew de Clairmont and Diana Bishop discuss the bundling custom See also EditNon penetrative sexReferences Edit History of Sex Love and Sexuality 1750 America and Bundling The People s Almanac 1975 1981 Stiles Henry Reed 2005 Bundling Its Origin Progress and Decline reprint ed Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 1 4179 8628 6 Bundling GAMEO gameo org Retrieved 2022 12 01 Ruth 3 9 14 4 13 a b Moller Herbert 1945 Sex Composition and Correlated Culture Patterns of Colonial America The William and Mary Quarterly 2 2 114 153 doi 10 2307 1923515 ISSN 0043 5597 a b Courtship Sex and the Single Colonist The Colonial Williamsburg Official History amp Citizenship Site research colonialwilliamsburg org Retrieved 2022 12 08 a b c d e f g h Godbeer Richard 2004 Courtship and Sexual Freedom in Eighteenth Century America OAH Magazine of History 18 4 9 13 ISSN 0882 228X a b Stiles Henry Reed Bundling its Origin Progress and Decline in America ISBN 978 3 337 08809 5 OCLC 1189849207 Grose Francis 2004 A classical dictionary of the vulgar tongue Beard Books ISBN 1 58798 247 1 OCLC 65471926 a b Smith Daniel Scott Hindus Michael S 1975 Premarital Pregnancy in America 1640 1971 An Overview and Interpretation The Journal of Interdisciplinary History 5 4 537 570 doi 10 2307 202859 ISSN 0022 1953 Marsden George 2003 Jonathan Edwards A Life Yale University Press p 130 ISBN 9780300129946 jonathan edwards bundling Smith Daniel Scott Hindus Michael S 1975 Premarital Pregnancy in America 1640 1971 An Overview and Interpretation The Journal of Interdisciplinary History 5 4 537 570 doi 10 2307 202859 ISSN 0022 1953 Shachtman p 10 a b c Loeb E M 1950 Courtship and the Love Song Anthropos 45 4 6 821 851 ISSN 0257 9774 Raphael Marc Lee ed 2020 04 15 Approaches to Modern Judaism Brown Judaic Studies doi 10 2307 j ctvzgb99q 4 ISBN 978 1 951498 44 3 Cohen Daniel A 1997 The Beautiful Female Murder Victim Literary Genres and Courtship Practices in the Origins of a Cultural Motif 1590 1850 Journal of Social History 31 2 277 306 ISSN 0022 4529 Kok Jan Bras Hilde Rotering Paul 2016 Courtship and Bridal Pregnancy in the Netherlands 1870 1950 Annales de demographie historique 2 132 165 192 ISSN 0066 2062 Sources EditShachtman Tom Rumspringa To Be or Not to Be Amish New York North Point Press Farrar Straus and Giroux 2006 Ekrich Roger A At Day s Close Night in Times Past Chapter 7 2005 Walsh William S Handy Book of Curious Information J B Lippincott Company 1913 Little Known Facts about Bundling in the New World by Ammon Monroe Aurand Jr 1895 1956 External links EditFolk Lore of the Pennsylvania Germans The Art of Bundling Being an Inquiry into the Nature and Origins of that Curious but Universal Folk Custom with an Exposition of the Rise amp Fall of Bundling in the Eastern Part of North America By Dana Doten 1938 Bundling in the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online The original bundlers Boaz and Ruth and seventeenth century English courtship practices Critical Essay Journal of Social History Spring 2002 by Yochi Fischer Yinon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bundling tradition amp oldid 1133844304, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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