%A Chun Shan %T MARRIAGE LAW AND CONFUCIAN ETHICS IN THE QING DYNASTY %0 Journal Article %D 2013 %J Front. Law China %J Frontiers of Law in China %@ 1673-3428 %R 10.3868/s050-002-013-0027-2 %P 814-833 %V 8 %N 4 %U {https://journal.hep.com.cn/flc/EN/10.3868/s050-002-013-0027-2 %8 2013-12-05 %X

The Qing Dynasty is the last dynasty of all the twelve dynasties in Chinese history. Its family law embodied the Confucian conception of the integration of family, country and the world under heaven. The rule of traditional Chinese society was depicted as “the Rule of Propriety and Music” which had been established by Duke Zhou as an instrumentalist mechanism and refined by the Confucian humanistic value orientation. This rule exhibited the intricate fabric of both family and country in five-types in dressing-service, making the laws and legalities in the Qing Codes and Cases peculiar in marriage, divorce, property inheritance and heir adoption and confirmation with obvious female and juvenile discriminations. Since Confucian ethics was introduced as a remedy to the deficiency in regulation and the stereotypes of mentality in the late Zhou Dynasty, their suggestions on equal and universal moral rights have become apparent in the relative enactments and cases ever since. As a system of social regulation, the Qing Codes and Cases demonstrated validity and stability in all areas of family law as well as in their compromise with Confucian ethics in the solidarity of family, clan, country and world where the right to live and the balance between right and duty had been always prioritized.