levirate marriage

English

Etymology

levirate + marriage, from Late Latin lēvir (husband's brother).

Noun

levirate marriage (countable and uncountable, plural levirate marriages)

  1. A marriage in which a widow marries her late husband's brother in order to maintain the family community.
    • 2008, Deborah L. Ellens, Women in the Sex Texts of Leviticus and Deuteronomy: A Comparative Conceptual Analysis, Bloomsbury, →ISBN, page 261:
      Levirate marriage protects a levir's sexual property and a dead man's entitlement. The former, however, serves the latter.

Coordinate terms

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