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History of Marriage & Divorce Law

50 landmark legislative acts that shaped how the world marries, divorces, and divides — from ancient Babylon to today.

50Legislative Acts
37Jurisdictions
~4,000Years of History

Marriage law is one of humanity's oldest legal institutions. Every act below represents a turning point — a moment when a society decided to redefine who could marry, how marriages could end, and what rights each spouse held. Together they trace the arc from marriage as property transfer to marriage as equal partnership.

Ancient Codes

1754 BC – 565 AD

c. 1754 BC
🏛️

Code of Hammurabi

Babylon

One of the earliest known written law codes to regulate marriage, divorce, dowry, and adultery.

  • Divorce was the husband's prerogative but required restoring the wife's dowry and providing income
  • Wives could seek divorce and keep dowry/children if the husband 'degraded' her
  • Adultery punished by drowning both parties
  • Formalized child betrothal contracts
451–450 BC
🏛️

The Twelve Tables

Leges Duodecim Tabularum

Roman Republic

First codified Roman law; established marriage as a property-related concern and recognized 'usus' marriage.

  • Tabula VI.6 codified marriage through usus (continuous cohabitation for one year)
  • Tabula XI prohibited interclass marriage between patricians and plebeians
  • Wives could interrupt usus by absenting themselves for three consecutive nights per year
445 BC
🏛️

Lex Canuleia

Roman Republic

Restored the right of interclass marriage between patricians and plebeians.

  • Legalized marriage between patricians and plebeians
  • Children inherited the class status of their father
18 BC
🏛️

Lex Julia de Maritandis Ordinibus

Roman Empire

Made marriage a civic duty under Emperor Augustus; penalized celibacy and childlessness.

  • Required all citizens of marriageable age to marry
  • Imposed inheritance restrictions for remaining unmarried or childless
  • Limited marriage across certain social class boundaries
17 BC
🏛️

Lex Julia de Adulteriis Coercendis

Roman Empire

Made adultery a public criminal offense for the first time in Roman history.

  • Punished adultery with banishment and property confiscation
  • Husbands required to divorce adulterous wives
  • Wife's adultery always criminal; husband's only criminal with married women
c. 200 BC – 200 AD
🕉️

Manusmriti (Laws of Manu)

Manava Dharmashastra

Ancient India

Codified Hindu marriage law, defining eight forms of marriage and spousal duties.

  • Defined eight types of marriage (Brahma, Prajapatya, Arsha, Daiva, Asura, Gandharva, Rakshasa, Paishacha)
  • Established wife's dependence on male relatives throughout life
  • Later texts (Narada Smriti, Parashara Smriti) permitted dissolution under limited grounds
438 AD
🏛️

Codex Theodosianus

Roman Empire

First comprehensive compilation of Roman laws since Constantine; significantly restricted divorce rights.

  • Men could repudiate wife only for adultery, sorcery, or procuring
  • Wife divorcing without proving husband's 'great crimes' lost dowry and faced deportation
  • Tightened conditions for divorce compared to classical Roman law
529–565 AD
🏛️

Corpus Juris Civilis

Byzantine Empire

Comprehensive codification of Roman law by Emperor Justinian I; foundation of civil law across Europe.

  • Novel 117 and Novel 134 reformed marriage and divorce law
  • Parties divorcing without enumerated grounds could be confined to a monastery
  • Strengthened dowry protections
  • Became the foundation of European civil law tradition

Religious & Canon Law

1563 – 1917

1563

Decree Tametsi (Council of Trent)

Catholic Church

First canon law requiring a formal ceremony of marriage; ended recognition of clandestine marriages.

  • Required presence of parish priest and 2–3 witnesses for valid marriage
  • Mandated publication of banns before marriage
  • Required written marriage records
  • Marriages failing these requirements declared invalid
1917
🌙

Ottoman Decree of Family Law

Hukuk-i Aile Kararnamesi

Ottoman Empire

First codification of Islamic family law in history; applied to Muslims, Christians, and Jews.

  • Drew from all four Sunni schools of Islamic law
  • Expanded grounds for divorce to include disease, mental illness, and impotence
  • Became the basis for family law in Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, and Palestine

Enlightenment & Early Modern

1753 – 1882

1753
🇬🇧

Lord Hardwicke's Marriage Act

Clandestine Marriages Act

England & Wales

First statutory legislation requiring a formal ceremony of marriage in England.

  • Mandated Anglican church weddings as the only legal form of marriage
  • Required banns to be read for three consecutive weeks
  • Parental consent mandatory for minors
  • Non-compliant marriages declared void
1792
🇫🇷

French Revolutionary Divorce Law

Loi autorisant le divorce en France

France

First modern secular divorce law in Europe; established divorce on equal terms for men and women.

  • Allowed divorce by mutual consent
  • Permitted unilateral divorce on grounds of 'incompatibility of temperament'
  • Also allowed fault grounds: madness, violence, cruelty, abandonment for 2+ years
  • Resulted in 30,000 divorces between 1792–1803
1804
🇫🇷

Napoleonic Code

Code Civil des Français

France

Comprehensive civil law code; made divorce more restrictive; established husband's legal supremacy.

  • Abolished mutual consent divorce (restored the 1792 law's rollback)
  • Made it far easier for husbands to divorce than wives
  • Wife owed obedience to husband; children went to father by default
  • Influenced civil codes across Europe, Latin America, and beyond
1857
🇬🇧

Matrimonial Causes Act

England & Wales

Transferred divorce jurisdiction from ecclesiastical courts to secular civil courts for the first time.

  • Created the Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes
  • Husbands could divorce for wife's adultery alone
  • Wives required to prove adultery plus additional offense (double standard)
  • Section 57 permitted remarriage after divorce
  • Dramatically lowered the cost of divorce
1882
🇬🇧

Married Women's Property Act

England & Wales

Altered the doctrine of coverture; recognized married women as separate legal entities with property rights.

  • Gave married women the right to own, buy, and sell property in their own name
  • Restored wives' legal identity separate from husbands
  • Courts recognized husband and wife as two separate legal entities

Women's Rights & Early Reform

1848 – 1961

1848
🇺🇸

Married Women's Property Act of New York

New York, USA

Landmark statute allowing married women to retain property rights; became the template for other states.

  • Married women could keep property brought into marriage
  • Right to keep earned wages
  • Retained guardianship of children in cases of separation/divorce
  • Became the model for married women's property legislation nationwide (Mississippi passed a similar act in 1839)
1918
🇷🇺

Soviet Code on Marriage, the Family, and Guardianship

Russian SFSR

World's first no-fault, no-grounds divorce system; abolished ecclesiastical power over marriage.

  • Eliminated validity of religious marriage (civil marriage only)
  • No-grounds divorce at request of either spouse
  • Abolished 'illegitimacy' — all children entitled to parental support
  • Established full gender equality in marriage
1924 / 1967
🇺🇸

Racial Integrity Act / Loving v. Virginia

Virginia / USA (Supreme Court)

The 1924 act banned interracial marriage; the 1967 Supreme Court decision struck down all state antimiscegenation laws.

  • Racial Integrity Act criminalized interracial marriage and sex
  • Loving v. Virginia (unanimous 9-0) ruled antimiscegenation laws unconstitutional
  • Based on Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of the 14th Amendment
1926
🇹🇷

Turkish Civil Code

Republic of Turkey

Replaced Sharia-derived Mecelle with secular Swiss-model civil code; revolutionary secularization in a Muslim-majority nation.

  • Abolished polygamy; established monogamous marriage
  • Gave women equal rights to divorce, inheritance, and child custody
  • Set minimum marriage age at 18 for both sexes
  • Adopted nearly verbatim from the Swiss Civil Code
1926
🇷🇺

Soviet Family Code

USSR / RSFSR

Recognized unregistered (de facto) marriages and expanded divorce access further.

  • Extended legal protections to unregistered (de facto) wives
  • Required equal division of property acquired during marriage
  • Either spouse could register divorce without partner's consent
  • Legalized adoption (previously prohibited)
1954
🇮🇳

Special Marriage Act

India

Created a secular civil marriage option independent of any religion's personal law.

  • Enabled civil marriage for all Indian citizens regardless of religion
  • Applied to interfaith and inter-caste marriages
  • Provided for divorce by mutual consent after one year of separation
1955
🇮🇳

Hindu Marriage Act

India

First codification of Hindu marriage law; introduced divorce for Hindus (previously considered sacramental and indissoluble).

  • Codified marriage and divorce law for Hindus, Sikhs, Jains, and Buddhists
  • Introduced judicial divorce on grounds including adultery, cruelty, desertion
  • Required monogamy; set minimum marriage ages
  • Applied to approximately 80% of India's population
1956
🇹🇳

Code of Personal Status

Majella

Tunisia

Most progressive family law code in the Arab world; first Muslim-majority country to completely ban polygamy.

  • Outlawed polygamy entirely (punishable by one year imprisonment)
  • Required court proceedings for all divorces
  • Gave women equal right to file for divorce
  • Abolished wife's obligation of obedience to her husband
  • Required mutual consent for marriage
1961
🇵🇰

Muslim Family Laws Ordinance

Pakistan

First comprehensive reform of Muslim family law in Pakistan; regulated polygamy and divorce procedure.

  • Made marriage registration mandatory
  • Required men seeking polygamy to obtain written permission from Arbitration Council
  • Required 90-day notice to Union Council before talaq takes effect
  • Violation of polygamy restriction punishable by imprisonment

The No-Fault Revolution

1969 – 1996

1969
🇺🇸

California Family Law Act

California, USA

First no-fault divorce law in the United States; signed by Governor Ronald Reagan.

  • Replaced 'divorce' with 'dissolution of marriage'
  • Established 'irreconcilable differences' as the sole ground
  • Eliminated fault as a factor in property division
  • Effective January 1, 1970; virtually every US state followed within 15 years
1969
🇬🇧

Divorce Reform Act

England & Wales

Introduced partial no-fault divorce; made 'irretrievable breakdown' the sole ground.

  • Ended requirement to prove fault for divorce
  • Allowed divorce after 2 years separation (with consent) or 5 years (without consent)
  • Adultery, behavior, and desertion remained as evidence of breakdown but not required
1970
🇺🇸

Uniform Marriage and Divorce Act

USA (model legislation)

Model statute encouraging standardized no-fault marriage and divorce laws across all US states.

  • Introduced 'irreconcilable differences' as the sole ground for divorce
  • Addressed equitable property division
  • Set marriage age at 18 without consent, 16–18 with parental/judicial consent
  • Directly adopted by few states but profoundly influenced all state divorce law
1970
🇮🇹

Fortuna-Baslini Law (Law No. 898)

Legge Fortuna-Baslini

Italy

Legalized divorce in Italy for the first time, breaking the Catholic Church's influence on civil law.

  • Allowed dissolution when 'spiritual and material communion between spouses cannot be maintained'
  • Survived a 1974 repeal referendum (59.3% voted to keep the law)
  • Referendum turnout was 87.7% — a massive public mandate
1975
🇦🇺

Family Law Act

Australia

Replaced fault-based divorce with a no-fault system; eliminated 14 previous fault grounds.

  • Established sole ground of irretrievable breakdown proven by 12 months of separation
  • Eliminated all previous fault grounds (adultery, desertion, cruelty, etc.)
  • Ended the costly and humiliating process of proving spousal guilt in court
1976
🇩🇪

First Marriage and Family Law Reform Act

Erstes Eherechtsreformgesetz

West Germany

Introduced no-fault divorce in Germany; replaced fault-based system from the 1896 Civil Code.

  • Established irretrievable breakdown as the sole ground for divorce
  • Replaced the previous fault-based system from BGB of 1896 and Marriage Act of 1938
  • Built on the 1957 Equal Rights Act (Gleichberechtigungsgesetz)
1980
🇺🇸

Equitable Distribution Law (DRL § 236B)

New York, USA

Transformed New York from a common law property state to equitable distribution; recognized marriage as an economic partnership.

  • Required courts to equitably divide marital property based on multiple factors
  • Replaced the previous system where only alimony (available only to wives) existed
  • No provision for property distribution had existed before 1980
1981 / 2005
🇪🇸

Spanish Divorce Law / Express Divorce Reform

Ley 30/1981

Spain

1981: Legalized divorce after a 40-year ban under Franco. 2005: Introduced express no-fault divorce.

  • 1981 law required cause (alcoholism, infidelity, abandonment) and 2 years of separation
  • 2005 reform introduced 'express divorce' — no cause, separation period, or judicial review required
  • Spain went from total ban to one of Europe's most liberal divorce laws in 24 years
1985
🇨🇦

Divorce Act (revised)

Canada

Introduced no-fault divorce in Canada; reduced separation period from 3 years to 1 year.

  • Established marriage breakdown as the sole reason for divorce
  • Reduced required separation from 3 years (1968 Act) to 1 year
  • Placed both spouses on equal footing
  • Original 1968 Act had been Canada's first uniform federal divorce law
1987
🇸🇪

Swedish Marriage Code

Äktenskapsbalken 1987:230

Sweden

Comprehensive modernization of Swedish marriage law; codified no-fault divorce from 1973 reform.

  • Required spouses to show mutual respect and jointly nurture home and children
  • Included Act on Cohabitees' Joint Home — property rights for unmarried cohabitants
  • Part of broader Nordic family law cooperation dating to 1909
1995 / 1996
🇮🇪

Fifteenth Amendment & Family Law (Divorce) Act

Ireland

Removed constitutional ban on divorce; Ireland was the last Western European country to legalize divorce.

  • 1937 Constitution had prohibited divorce entirely
  • First referendum to remove ban failed in 1986 (63.5% against)
  • Second referendum passed by narrowest margin: 50.28% to 49.72%
  • Required 4 out of 5 years living apart with no prospect of reconciliation
1996
🇺🇸

Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA)

USA (federal)

Defined marriage as one man/one woman for federal purposes; later struck down.

  • Allowed states to refuse recognition of same-sex marriages from other states
  • Denied over 1,000 federal benefits to same-sex couples
  • Struck down by United States v. Windsor (2013) and Obergefell v. Hodges (2015)
1998
🇿🇦

Recognition of Customary Marriages Act

South Africa

Recognized African customary law marriages (including polygynous marriages) as legal for the first time.

  • Signed by President Nelson Mandela
  • Customary marriages could only be dissolved by High Court or regional civil court
  • Ended the power of traditional leaders to grant divorces
  • All monogamous marriages in community of property unless antenuptial contract exists

Modern Era

2000 – Present

2000
🇪🇬

Law No. 1 of 2000 (Khula Law)

Egypt

Granted Egyptian women the right to file for no-fault divorce (khula) without requiring husband's consent.

  • Women could file for khula without demonstrating grounds
  • Wife must forfeit alimony, deferred dowry, and repay advanced dowry
  • Husband has no right to appeal khula
  • Prohibited talaq ghiyabi (divorce without informing the wife)
2001
🇳🇱

Act on the Opening Up of Marriage

Wet openstelling huwelijk

Netherlands

Made the Netherlands the first country in the world to legalize same-sex marriage.

  • Passed House of Representatives 109-33; Senate 49-26
  • Royal assent by Queen Beatrix, December 21, 2000
  • Effective April 1, 2001
  • Legalized same-sex adoption alongside marriage
2004
🇨🇱

New Marriage Law

Ley de Matrimonio Civil No. 19,947

Chile

Legalized divorce for the first time in Chilean history; Chile was the last country in the Western Hemisphere without divorce.

  • Introduced divorce after 1 year separation (mutual) or 3 years (unilateral)
  • Overturned the 1884 civil marriage code that prohibited divorce
  • Bill first introduced in 1914; passed after 18 previous bills failed
2004
🇲🇦

Moudawana Reform

Morocco

Most ambitious reform of Moroccan family law; moved from traditional Maliki Islamic law toward gender equality.

  • Regulated polygamy (requiring judicial authorization and first wife's consent)
  • Granted custody of children to the mother
  • Established equality between spouses in marriage for the first time
  • Initiated by King Mohammed VI
2010
🇺🇸

No-Fault Divorce Amendment (DRL 170(7))

New York, USA

Made New York the last US state to enact no-fault divorce.

  • Added DRL 170(7): divorce by alleging irretrievable breakdown for 6+ months
  • No fault or specific reasons required
  • New York had required proving fault for all 50 prior years
2010
🇧🇷

Constitutional Amendment 66

Emenda Constitucional 66/2010

Brazil

Eliminated all preconditions for divorce; allowed immediate divorce without fault, waiting period, or prior judicial separation.

  • Altered Article 226 to simply read: 'Civil marriage can be dissolved by divorce'
  • Revoked Civil Code articles requiring judicial separation before divorce
  • Eliminated all fault requirements and separation periods
2011
🇲🇹

Divorce Referendum & Civil Code Amendment

Malta

Legalized divorce in Malta — the last country in Europe without divorce.

  • Approved by referendum in 2011
  • Divorce allowed after 4 years separation (or 1 year if both consent)
  • Followed by Civil Unions Act 2014 and Marriage Equality Act 2017
2019
🇮🇳

Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Act

India

Criminalized instant triple talaq — the practice of Muslim men instantly divorcing wives by pronouncing 'talaq' three times.

  • Declared instant triple talaq void and illegal
  • Imprisonment up to 3 years and fine for husband who practices it
  • Divorced woman entitled to subsistence allowance and custody of minor children
  • Triple talaq cases dropped 82% within one year
2019
🇹🇼

Interpretation No. 748 Implementation Act

Taiwan

First legalization of same-sex marriage in Asia.

  • Followed a 2017 Constitutional Court ruling declaring marriage law unconstitutional for excluding same-sex couples
  • Legislature given two years to comply; act passed May 2019
  • Same-sex couples granted adoption rights in 2023
2020 / 2022
🇬🇧

Divorce, Dissolution and Separation Act

England & Wales

Introduced full no-fault divorce; came into force 6 April 2022.

  • Removed all fault-based requirements entirely
  • Sole or joint applications permitted
  • Statement of irretrievable breakdown is sufficient (no reasons needed)
  • Minimum 20-week 'reflection period' before conditional order
2022
🇸🇦

Personal Status Law

Saudi Arabia

First-ever codification of family law in Saudi Arabia; previously judges interpreted Sharia independently.

  • 252 provisions based on Islamic law; set minimum marriage age at 18
  • Ended 'secret divorce' — husbands must inform wives
  • Dowry belongs exclusively to the wife
  • Court can dissolve marriage for spousal harm, neglect, or prolonged absence
  • Only men retain unconditional right to initiate divorce (talaq)
2022
🇺🇸

Respect for Marriage Act

USA (federal)

Repealed DOMA; codified federal recognition of same-sex and interracial marriages.

  • Required all states to provide full faith and credit to out-of-state marriages
  • Codified the holdings of Windsor and Obergefell
  • First federal statutory authority for same-sex and interracial marriage
  • Signed by President Biden, December 13, 2022
2024 / 2025
🇹🇭

Marriage Equality Act

Thailand

Second country in Asia and first in Southeast Asia to legalize same-sex marriage.

  • Replaced 'men and women' with 'individuals' and 'husband and wife' with 'spouses'
  • Allowed same-sex couples to jointly adopt children
  • Signed by the King September 24, 2024; effective January 23, 2025

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This timeline is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Legislative details are simplified for accessibility; consult primary sources or a licensed attorney for jurisdiction-specific legal questions.