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Marriage Banns: 8th Century, Europe
by Charles Panati

During European feudal times, all public announcements concerning deaths, taxes, or births
were called "banns".  Today we use the term exclusively for an announcement that two people
propose to marry.  That interpretation began as a result of an order by Charlemagne, king of the
Franks, who on Christmas Day in    A.D. 800 was crowned Emperor of the Romans, marking
the birth of the Holy Roman Empire.

Charlemagne, with a vast region to rule, had a practical medical reason for
instituting marriage banns.

Among rich and poor alike, a child's parentage was not always clear; an extramarital
indiscretion could lead to a half-brother and a half-sister marrying, and frequently did.  
Charlemagne, alarmed by the high rate of sibling marriages, and the subsequent genetic damage
to the offspring, issued an edict throughout his unified kingdom: All marriages were to be
publicly proclaimed at least seven days prior to the ceremony.  To avoid consanguinity between
the prospective bride and groom, any person with information that the man and woman were
related as brother or sister, or as half-siblings, was ordered to come forth.  The practice proved
so successful that it was widely endorsed by all faiths.