“Bridal Pregnancy in Earlier Rural England Further Examined”, P. E. H. Hair1970-03-01 (, )⁠:

This paper elaborates the argument of a previous paper ([”Bridal pregnancy in rural England in earlier centuries”, Hair1966] Population Studies, 20, 1966, pp. 233–43).

The results of an investigation of the experience of 2,340 brides are broadly similar to those reported earlier: in particular, they confirm that bridal pregnancy was more common in the 18th than in the 17th century. Evidence is presented to suggest that the 16th-century experience was similar to that of the 17th, while the 19th-century experience was similar to that of the 18th.

It is argued that bridal pregnancy was the product of a courting convention, rather than of ‘betrothal-licence’, and that it was not especially common among widows or teenagers. It is incidentally shown that the interval between birth and baptism was very brief in the 16th century, but lengthened in later centuries; and that the forbidden seasons for marriage were gradually eroded.

Finally, it is suggested that the application of Church discipline in relation to bridal pregnancy could be assessed in the Church Court records.