I have had cause to go through every “Cotter” family in County Cork in the censuses and in so doing I have noticed a huge number of marriages where the ages of the husband and wife were vastly different, like a 40 year old woman married to a 20 year old man and visa versa.
My understanding is that after the famine, land, instead of being divvied up between the children, went to the oldest son, who would not marry till his father died. This would explain the much older men marrying younger women.
I assume the older women marrying younger men were widows who remarried (often there were children with a different last name in the household) for help on the farm.
I fully understand that differences in age don’t necessarily mean that the marriage was unhappy, and I fully understand that romantic love as we know it wasn’t the main point of things, but still, it seems desperate to me. Were these marriages as sad as they seem. Honestly, a 40 year old woman and a 20 year old man? She knows full well the burden of childbirth and probably doesn’t want any more kids, what about her poor husband? The 50 year old man marrying a 20 year old woman, what do they have in common?
And there’s proof that the situation was fraught—they left. In vast never ending numbers, they left.
My question is, how does a society decide to move to primogenitary. By the time of the famine it had become obvious in those nations practicing it that there were problems. And in the case of the widow remarrying, does the second husband inherit or is the land (or the lease on the land, I guess) held by her in trust for the eldest son of the first husband. Whichever way it goes, what happens to the second husband or the eldest child of the first husband?
Are there any books that discuss this in depth? Are there biographies or memoirs about these people? I just feel so sad for them; I would really like to know what they thought of their own lives.