sororate

anthropology
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secondary marriage

sororate, custom or law decreeing that a widower should, or in rare cases must, marry his deceased wife’s sister. The term comes from the Latin word soror, “sister,” and was introduced by the British anthropologist Sir James George Frazer. The “sister” may be a biological or adopted sibling of the first wife or a person who is socially classified as such. The sororate often co-occurs with the levirate, or marriage of a widow to her deceased husband’s brother. They appear to be the most common of preferential secondary marriages. Either may be permissive rather than obligatory.

Though successive and simultaneous marriages of two or more sisters fall under the same principle, some peoples favour one practice while tabooing the other. Serial sororate is less common than sororal polygyny, the marriage of two or more sisters to one man.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Elizabeth Prine Pauls.