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Widows’ Heir Adoption Seen through Legal Disputes in Late Joseon Korea: Focusing on the Position of the Eldest Daughter-in-lawopen access

Authors
김보람
Issue Date
Jun-2023
Publisher
한국학중앙연구원
Keywords
widow; eldest daughter-in-law; adoption; legal dispute; descent-line principle; kinship practice; Chinese widow
Citation
Korea Journal, v.63, no.2, pp 177 - 200
Pages
24
Journal Title
Korea Journal
Volume
63
Number
2
Start Page
177
End Page
200
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/88912
DOI
10.25024/kj.2023.63.2.177
ISSN
0023-3900
2733-9343
Abstract
Widow’s heir adoption in Joseon was largely secured by the adoption law in the Great Code of Administration. Widows, especially eldest daughters-in-law, in late Joseon were involved in legal disputes with their husbands’ younger brothers or the entire descent group over adoption. On the one hand, widows relied on adoption to protect their positions in their husband’s lineage against the encroachment of their brothers-in-law claiming the status of lineage heir. On the other hand, widows actively pursued their choice of an adoptee with strong social background, albeit from a distant relative, against the collective opinion of the husband’s descent group. In most cases, the state ruled for the widow’s adoption not only by law but also by acknowledging the widow’s position as the eldest son’s wife. The state believed that the widowed eldest daughters-in-law could secure the lineal succession of a descent group against the collateral line. Widows themselves went on to appropriate such a descentline principle to their favor, actively claiming their status as a representative of the direct line of descent. Such a close relationship between widows and the lineage principle in late Joseon was something rarely seen in contemporaneous China. Widow’s heir adoption may be a useful lens for observing differences in kinship practices between pre-modern Korea and China.
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