Maiden and married names

When a person (traditionally the wife in many cultures) assumes the family name of their spouse, that name replaces the person's previous surname, which in the case of the wife is called the maiden name (birth name is also used as a gender-neutral or masculine substitute for maiden name), whereas a married name is a family name or surname adopted by a person upon marriage. In Scotland it is legal and not unusual for a woman to retain her maiden name after marriage, however in doing so it means children will have different surnames to their mother or (if child has mother's surname) people will assume the father isn't the biological father.

In some jurisdictions, changing one's name requires a legal procedure. Nevertheless, in some jurisdictions anyone who either marries or divorces may change their name. Due to increasing security and identification needs, even where it is legal, the common law method is now rarely accepted except (especially for women) at marriage. Traditionally, in the Anglophone West only women change their names on marriage, but in some instances men may change their last names upon marriage as well, including same-sex couples.[1]

In the United States, only eight states have an official name change for a man as part of their marriage process, and in others a man may petition a court or—where not prohibited—use the common law method (though government agencies sometimes do not recognize this procedure for men). Due to the widespread practice of women changing their names at marriage, they encounter little difficulty using the common law method at marriage in those jurisdictions that permit it.[1][2]

In the remainder of this article, birth name, family name, surname, married name and maiden name refer to patrilineal surnames unless explicitly described as referring to matrilineal surnames.

Canada

In most of Canada, either partner may informally assume the spouse's surname after marriage, so long as it is not for the purposes of fraud. The same is true for people in common-law relationships, in some provinces. This is not considered a legal name change in most provinces, excluding British Columbia.[3] For federal purposes, such as a Canadian passport, Canadians may also assume their partner's surname if they are in a common-law relationship.[4] In the province of British Columbia, people have to undergo a legal name change if they want to use a combined surname after marriage.[5] Their marriage certificate is considered proof of their new name.[6][7]

The custom in Québec was similar to the one in France until 1981. Women would traditionally go by their husband's surname in daily life, but their maiden name remained their legal name.[8] Since the passage of a 1981 provincial law intended to promote gender equality, as outlined in the Québec Charter of Rights, no change may be made to a person's name without the authorization of the registrar of civil status or the authorization of the court. Newlyweds who wish to change their names upon marriage must therefore go through the same procedure as those changing their names for other reasons. The registrar of civil status may authorize a name change if:

  1. the name the person generally uses does not correspond to the name on their birth certificate,
  2. the name is of foreign origin or too difficult to pronounce or write in its original form, or
  3. the name invites ridicule or has become infamous.[9]

This law does not make it legal for a woman to change her name immediately upon marriage, as marriage is not listed among the reasons for a name change.[10]

English-speaking world

This process is expedited for newly married persons in that their marriage certificate, in combination with identification using their married name, is usually accepted as evidence of the change, due to the widespread custom, but the process still requires approaching every contact who uses the old name and asking them to use the new. Unless the statutes where the marriage occurred specify that a name change may occur at marriage (in which case the marriage certificate indicates the new name), the courts have officially recognized that such a change is a result of the common law right of a person (man, woman, and sometimes child) to change their name. However, men encounter more difficulties in changing their last names.[11] There were some early cases in the USA which held that under common law, a woman was required to take her husband's name,[12] but newer cases overturned that (see "Retain the birth name" below).[13] Currently, American women do not have to change their names by law.[14] Lindon v. First National Bank, 10 F. 894 (W.D. Pa. 1882), is one of the very earliest precedent-setting US federal court cases involving common law name change.[15] A woman who had changed her last name to one that was not her husband's original surname was trying to claim control over her inheritance. The court ruled in her favor. This set forth many things. By common law, one may lawfully change their name and be "known and recognized" by that new name. Also, one may enter into any kinds of contracts in their new adopted name. Contracts include employment (see Coppage v. Kansas 236 U.S. 1), and one can be recognized legally in court in their new name. In 1967 in Erie Exchange v. Lane, 246 Md. 55 (1967) the Maryland Court of Appeals held that a married woman can lawfully adopt an assumed name, even if it is not her birth name or the name of her lawful husband, without legal proceedings.[16]

Common options

Use husband's family name

In the past, a woman in England would usually assume her new husband's family name (or surname) after marriage; often she was compelled to do so under coverture laws. Assuming the husband's surname remains common practice today in the United Kingdom (although there is no law that states the name must be changed) and in other countries such as Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan, Gibraltar, Falkland Islands, Ireland, India, Philippines, the English-speaking provinces of Canada and the United States.

In some communities in India, spouses and children take the father's first name or proper name.

Often there are interesting variations of name adoption, including family name adoption. In Massachusetts, for instance, a Harvard study in 2004 found that about 87% of college-educated women take their husbands' name on marriage, down from a peak before 1975 of over 90%, but up from about 80% in 1990. The same study found women with a college degree were "two to four times (depending on age) more likely to retain their surname" than those without a college degree.[17]

In the lowlands of Scotland in the 16th century, married women did not change their surnames, but today it is common practice to do so.[18]

Usually, the children of these marriages are given their father's surname. Some families (mainly in the USA) have a custom of using the mother's maiden name as a middle name for one of the children—Franklin Delano Roosevelt received his middle name in this way[19] or even as a first name. Spessard Holland, a former Governor of Florida and former Senator, whose mother's maiden name was Virginia Spessard, received his first name in this way.

Retain the birth name

Women who keep their own surname after marriage may do so for a number of reasons:

  • Objection to the one-sidedness of this tradition.[20]
  • Being the last member of their family with that surname.
  • To avoid the hassle of paperwork related to their change of name.
  • Wishing to retain their identity
  • Preferring their last name to their spouse's last name
  • To avoid professional ramifications.[21]

The American suffragist and abolitionist Lucy Stone (1818–1893) made a national issue of a married woman's right to keep her own surname (as she herself did upon marriage) as part of her efforts for women's rights in the U.S. Women who choose to keep their prior names have been called "Lucy Stoners".[22] In 1879, when Boston women were granted the franchise in school elections, Stone registered to vote. But officials would not allow her to vote unless she added "Blackwell", her husband's last name, to her signature. This she refused to do, and so she was not able to vote. She did not challenge the action in a court of law.[23]

The Lucy Stone League, named after her, was founded in 1921 by Ruth Hale; it was the first group to fight for women to be allowed to keep their maiden name after marriage—and to use it legally.[24] Ruth Hale challenged in federal court that any government edict that would not recognize a married woman (such as herself) by the name she chose to use.[24] In May 1921 Hale obtained a real estate deed issued in her birth name rather than her married name, Mrs. Heywood Broun.[25]

In 1925 Doris Fleischman became the first married woman in the United States to receive a passport in her own name.[26] But by the early 1930s the Lucy Stone League was inactive.[27]

In People ex rel. Rago v. Lipsky, 63 N.E.2d 642 (Ill. 1945), the Appellate Court of Illinois, First District did not allow a married woman to stay registered to vote under her birth name, due to "the long-established custom, policy and rule of the common law among English-speaking peoples whereby a woman's name is changed by marriage and her husband's surname becomes as a matter of law her surname."[28][29]

In 1950, Jane Grant and 22 former members restarted the Lucy Stone League; its first meeting was on 22 March 1950 in New York City. Grant promptly won the Census Bureau's agreement that a married woman could use her birth surname as her official or real name in the census. (The New York Times, 10 April 1950).[30]

In the 1950s and 1960s, the League widened its focus to include all discrimination against women in the USA; the League was a forerunner of the National Organization for Women.[31]

In State ex rel. Krupa v. Green, 177 N.E.2d 616 (Ohio 1961), the Ohio appellate court allowed a married woman to register to vote in her birth name which she had openly and solely used, and been well known to use, before her marriage, and held that she could use that name as a candidate for public office.[32][28]

In 1972 in Stuart v. Board of Elections, 266 Md. 440, 446, on the question of whether a wife could register to vote in her birth name rather than her husband's last name, the Maryland Court of Appeals held, "[A] married woman's surname does not become that of her husband where, as here, she evidences a clear intent to consistently and nonfraudulently use her birth given name subsequent to her marriage."[16]

In the 1970s the Olympia Brown League was founded to help women's name rights in Milwaukee, in response to a court decision against women seeking to keep their maiden names upon marriage; Olympia Brown had kept hers upon her marriage in 1873.[33] Specifically, the case with that court decision was Kruzel v. Podell (1975), in which the Supreme Court of Wisconsin decided that a woman upon marriage adopts the last name of her husband by customarily using that name after marriage, but also stated that no law required her to.[34]

In 1975 in Dunn v. Palermo, the Supreme Court of Tennessee held that "in this jurisdiction a woman, upon marriage, has a freedom of choice. She may elect to retain her own surname or she may adopt the surname of her husband. The choice is hers. We hold that a person's legal name is that given at birth, or as voluntarily changed by either spouse at the time of marriage, or as changed by affirmative acts as provided under the Constitution and laws of the State of Tennessee. So long as a person's name remains constant and consistent, and unless and until changed in the prescribed manner, and absent any fraudulent or legally impermissible intent, the State has no legitimate concern."[35]

A new version of the Lucy Stone League was started in 1997, again focused on name equality.[36]

The American laws and cases noted above do not include all the relevant American laws and cases regarding maiden names. Currently, American women do not have to change their names by law.[14]

Join both names (hyphenation)

It is less common for women, especially in the US and Canada, to add their spouse's name and their own birth name.[1]

Name blending

Although less common than name joining, a growing trend is the blending of two surnames upon marriage.[37] This means adding parts of the two names. An example is Dawn O'Porter.

Birth name as middle name

Examples are Hillary Rodham Clinton[38] and Kim Kardashian West.

Children

In the United States, some states or areas have laws that restrict what surname a child may have. For example, Tennessee allows a child to be given a surname that does not include that of the father only upon "the concurrent submission of a sworn application to that effect signed by both parents."[39]

In 2007, Michael Buday and Diana Bijon enlisted the American Civil Liberties Union and filed a discrimination lawsuit against the state of California. According to the ACLU, the obstacles facing a husband who wishes to adopt his wife's last name violated the equal protection clause provided by the 14th Amendment of the Constitution.[40] At the time of the lawsuit, only the states of Georgia, Hawaii, Iowa, Massachusetts, New York and North Dakota explicitly allowed a man to change his name through marriage with the same ease as a woman. As a result of the lawsuit, the Name Equality Act of 2007 was passed to allow either spouse to change their name, using their marriage license as the means of the change; the law took effect in 2009.[11][41]

In 2013, Florida resident Lazaro Dinh had his licence revoked by the Florida Department of Motor Vehicles for adopting his wife Hanh Dinh's surname.[42] Subsequently, the licence was restored and the Department acknowledged their error.[43]

Feminism and preserving one's personal name

(Also see "Retain the birth name" above.)

The feminist Lucy Stone (1818–1893) made a national issue of a married woman's right to keep her own surname (as she herself did upon marriage) as part of her efforts for women's rights in the U.S. Because of her, women who choose not to use their husbands' surnames have been called "Lucy Stoners".[22]

The feminist Elizabeth Cady Stanton took her husband's surname as part of her own, signing herself Elizabeth Cady Stanton or E. Cady Stanton, but she refused to be addressed as Mrs. Henry B. Stanton. She wrote in 1847 that "the custom of calling women Mrs. John This and Mrs. Tom That and colored men Sambo and Zip Coon, is founded on the principle that white men are lords of all."[44][45] Later, when addressing the judiciary committee of the state legislature of New York in 1860 in a speech called "A Slave's Appeal", she stated in part, "The negro [slave] has no name. He is Cuffy Douglas or Cuffy Brooks, just whose Cuffy he may chance to be. The woman has no name. She is Mrs. Richard Roe or Mrs. John Doe, just whose Mrs. she may chance to be."[46][47]

The feminist Jane Grant, co-founder of The New Yorker, wrote in 1943 of her efforts to keep her name despite her marriage, as well as other women's experiences with their maiden names regarding military service, passports, voting, and business.

More recently, the feminist Jill Filipovic's opposition to name change for women who marry was published in The Guardian in 2013 as "Why should married women change their names? Let men change theirs", and cited as recommended reading on the social construction of gender in Critical Encounters in Secondary English: Teaching Literacy Theory to Adolescents by Deborah Appleman (2014).[48][49][50] Filipovic married Ty Lohrer McCormick in 2018, and kept her last name upon marriage.[51][52]

Use as security question

One's mother's maiden name has been a common security question in American banking since at least the 1980s.[53]

Spanish-speaking world

Spouses keep their original surnames. Following Spanish naming customs, a person's name consists of a given name (simple or composite) followed by two family names (surnames), the father's and the mother's. Any children whom a couple have together, take both first-surnames, so if "José Gómez Hevia" and "María Reyes García" had a child named "Andrés", the resulting name would be "Andrés Gómez Reyes". In Spain, a 1995 reform in the law allows the parents to choose whether the father's or the mother's surname goes first, although this order must be the same for all their children. For instance, the name of the son of the couple in the example above could be settled whether "Andrés Gómez Reyes" or "Andrés Reyes Gómez".[54]

In some Spanish-American countries it is customary for women to unofficially add the husband's first surname after her own, for social purposes such as invitation letters or event announcements. The couple above may introduce themselves as José Gómez Hevia and María Reyes de Gómez. It is also common to name, in formal settings, the wife of a man as "señora de ", followed by her husband's first surname.

Portuguese-speaking world

Wives usually assume the family name of their spouse, although there is a recent trend of women keeping their maiden names.[55] Following Portuguese naming customs, a person's name consists of a given name (simple or composite) followed by two family names (surnames), the mother's and the father's. Any children whom a couple have together, take both second-surnames.

Other European countries

Austria

In Austria, since 1 April 2013, marriage does not automatically change a woman's name; therefore a name change can only take place upon legal application. Before that date, the default was for a married woman's name to be changed to that of her husband, unless she legally applied to opt out of this.[56]

France

In France, by executive decision since 2011[57] and by law since 2013,[58] any married person may officially use their spouse's name as a common name by substituting or compounding it to their own. Before this it was common for married women to use their husband's name in everyday life but this had no legal recognition.

A common name does not replace a person's family name as written on their birth certificate.

From 4 March 2002 to 4 December 2009, children given both parents' names had to have them separated by a double dash (ex: Dupont--Clairemont). On 4 December 2009, the Conseil d'État ruled that a space can be used instead of the double dash. As a result, forms asking for the family name (nom de famille) do so on two lines ("1ère partie: ..... ", "2e partie: ....")[59]

Germany

In Germany, since 1977, a woman may adopt her husband's surname or a man may adopt his wife's surname. One of them may use a name combined from both surnames. The remaining single name is the "family name" (Ehename), which will be the surname of the children. If a man and woman both decide to keep and use their birth names after the wedding (no combined name), they shall declare one of those names the "family name". A combined name is not possible as a family name, but, since 2005, it has been possible to have a double name as a family name if one already had a double name, and the partner adopts that name. Double names then must be hyphenated. All family members must use that double name.[60][61]

Greece

Since 1983, when Greece adopted a new marriage law which guaranteed gender equality between the spouses,[62] women in Greece are required to keep their birth names for their whole lives.[63]

Italy

Spouses keep their original surnames. According to the Italian Civil Code (article 143 bis), a woman who marries keeps her surname and has the option of adding her husband's surname after hers. Non-Italian citizens getting married in Italy will not have their surname changed in Italy. However, brides or grooms can request their surname change in their home country.[64]

Netherlands

In the Netherlands, persons who have been married in the Netherlands or entered into a registered partnership will remain registered under their birth name. They are, however, permitted to use their partner's last name for social purposes or join both names. Upon marriage or registered partnership, one may also indicate how one would like to be addressed by registering one's choice at the Municipal Basis Administration (Gemeentelijke Basis Administratie) (although the birth name does not change). One may choose to be called by one's own name, one's partner's name, one's own name followed by one's partner's name (hyphenated), or one's partner's name followed by their own name (hyphenated). Both men and women may make this choice upon registering to get married or entering into a registered partnership. If the marriage or registered partnership ends, one may continue to use the ex-partner's last surname unless the ex-partner disagrees and requests the court to forbid the use of the ex-partner's surname.[65]

However, while name changes due to marriages performed in the Netherlands cannot be processed, it is certainly possible in the Netherlands to process name changes due to marriages performed outside the Netherlands, provided certain conditions are met: the marriage must be registered abroad, the application for name change abroad must be requested on the same date as the marriage date, the changed name must be recorded abroad on a certificate in accordance with the local rules of the foreign country, and the marriage and name change as well as proof of application as of the date of the marriage must be legalized/apostilled and provided to the Dutch consulate or Dutch municipality upon return to the Netherlands.

The reason is that international marriages are not necessarily governed by Dutch Law but by Private International Law which is codified in the Netherlands in the "Civic Law Book" (Burgerlijk Wetboek) Book No. 10, Private International Law, Title 2 – The Name, Article 24.[66]

Before the birth or adoption of a first child, married parents may choose the child's surname (mother's or father's but not both). If no choice is made, the child automatically bears the father's surname. Any further children will also go by this name. If the parents are not married, the children will automatically have their mother's name unless otherwise indicated.[67]

Russia

There is a widespread, though not universal, custom for a newly married wife to adopt the husband's family name. However, as Russia is not a common law country, any name change requires a formal procedure including an official application to the civil acts registrar. As the same registrar also records marriages, for the convenience sake it is often done during the marriage proceedings, as governed by the Federal Law #143-FZ "On Civil State Acts", and the couple's marriage certificate has an option of having one common family name, or both spouses going by their original surname. However, the law is entirely gender neutral, and the couple may adopt either of their surnames (a husband adopting his wife's family name is an uncommon but by no means unheard-of practice, which is generally accepted and carries little to no social stigma), or even a completely different one. The law also recognizes the couple's right to use the combined family name, and for the either of the spouses to reclaim their original surname in the case the marriage is dissolved.

Asian countries

China

Traditionally, a married woman keeps her name unchanged, without adopting her husband's surname.[68] A child would inherit the father's surname. This is still the norm in mainland China, though the marriage law explicitly states that a child may use either parent's surname. It is also common for two children born to the same parents to take different surnames, one after the father and the other after the mother. It is also possible, though far less common, for a child to combine both parents' surnames.[69]

Hong Kong

Due to British influence, some people in Hong Kong have also adopted the tradition of women changing their English last name, or prepending their husband's Chinese surname to her own in official occasions or business cards but rarely on resident identification or travel documents. Amongst the Chinese diaspora overseas, especially in Southeast Asia, women rarely legally adopt their spouse's surname.

Iran

It became mandatory in 1918 to use surname in Iran, and only in this time, the heads of families had the right to choose their family members' (including the wife) surname. It is stated in the article four of the law on Civil Registration in 1925, that "Everybody should choose his/her own name. The wife... maintains her family name that was called by." The same thing has been restated in the article three of the law on Civil Registration in 1928. There is not much difference in the article 38 of the law on Civil Registration in 1940, but there is another article (43) that says "If the couple separate legally, maintaining husband's surname is allowed if the husband allows, and if the husband has taken wife's family name, maintaining wife's surname is allowed if the wife allows." In the last related article (the article 42 of the law on Civil Registration in 1976) the same thing is said about wife's surname change, but it is silent about husband's surname change. [70][71] Currently, it is very unusual that either spouse change his/her surname after marriage in Iran.

Japan

Japanese law does not recognize married couples who have different surnames as lawful husband and wife, which means that 96% of married Japanese women take their husband's surname.[72] In 2015, the Japanese Supreme Court upheld the name-change law, ruling that it was not unconstitutional, noting that women could use informally their maiden names, and stating that it was the parliamentarians who should decide on whether to pass new legislation on separate spousal names.[73]

Korea

Traditionally, Korean women keep their family names after their marriage, while their children take the father's surname. Korea used to be relatively gender equal as of inheritance and familial duties up until at least the late 17th century. Often times, the genealogy books of the families would keep in track of the daughters and their spouses and offsprings too. Hence women to keep their maiden name was the norm and they were considered to be part of the family even after marriage. In the premodern, people were extremely conscious of familial values and their own family identities. Korean women keep their surnames after marriage based on traditional reasoning that it is what they inherited from their parents and ancestors. [74] Colloquially, Koreans consider the name of an individual as a singular entity, and changing the family name syllable would make the name sound strange with the other syllables of the given name. Nowadays, women still keep their names after marriage. The children could go by either parent's surname but it is still vastly more customary to go by the father's surname.

Philippines

The Civil Code provides several options for married women on what surname to take upon marriage:

  • keep her middle name (maternal surname) and add her husband's surname to the maiden name (e.g. Maria Isabella Flores Garcia-Dimaculangan/Ma. Isabella F. Garcia-Dimaculangan);
  • take the husband's surname and make her maiden name the middle name (Maria Isabella Garcia Dimaculangan/Ma. Isabella G. Dimaculangan);
  • take the husband's full name, with a prefix to indicate that she is his wife (e.g. Mrs./Ms. Dimaculangan)[75]

A woman may also keep her maiden name, as Philippine law does not require a woman to take her husband's surname at marriage. This is commonly done for professional reasons, as a woman may want to retain her name among her business contacts or audience.

The Civil Code also states that children as the result of the marriage will take the mother's middle name (maiden surname) and the father's surname. To illustrate this, the children of a married couple named Maria Josefa Lopez Mañego-Luansing and Juan Candido Luansing will take the middle name Mañego and the surname Luansing, so, one daughter with a given name of Juliana will be named Juliana Mañego Luansing.

Married women in professional circles (e.g. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Korina Sanchez-Roxas, Vilma Santos-Recto) typically join their maiden and married surnames in both professional and legal use (e.g. Maria Isabella Flores Garcia-Dimaculangan/Ma. Isabella F. Garcia-Dimaculangan). This allows them to be identified as married, and keep track of their professional achievements without being confused for being two different individual (e.g. Maria Isabella Flores Garcia/Ma. Isabella F. Garcia, as against Maria Isabella Garcia Dimaculangan/Ma. Isabella G. Dimaculangan)

An older scheme based on Spanish naming customs add the particle de ("of") between the maiden and married surnames (e.g. Maria Isabella Garcia de Dimaculangan or Ma. Isabella G. de Dimaculangan). This tradition is no longer common.

Taiwan

Taiwanese women generally keep their surnames after marriage while their children may inherit either the father's or the mother's. It is, however, legal to take the spouse's surname.[76] Some older women have the husband's surname tagged on to theirs, as was common in the early to mid-20th century.

Thailand

A Thai wife who adopted her husband's surname due to the old law requiring it, can also change back to her original surname.[77]

Turkey

Since 2014, women in Turkey are allowed to keep their birth names alone for their whole life instead of using their husbands' names.[78] Previously, the Turkish Code of Civil Law, Article 187, required a married woman to use her husband's surname; or else to use her birth name in front of her husband's name by giving a written application to the marriage officer or the civil registry office. In 2014, the Constitutional Court ruled that prohibiting married women from retaining only maiden names is a violation of their rights.[79]

Genealogy

Genealogists often also make note of all surnames used by a person during their lifetime (such as those acquired from birth parents, those assigned at birth when the father is unknown or not acknowledged, those acquired at marriage, and those acquired at a remarriage). For example, an illegitimate male child abandoned at birth in Italy or in other European countries will receive no surname from either of his birth parents but, instead, will be assigned a surname—often invented from one of the three kingdoms of nature, e.g., mineral ("Pietra"), vegetable ("Rosa") or animal ("Leoni"), or otherwise according to custom within a locality, such as "Esposito" (meaning "abandoned") or "Casa Grande" (referring to the "Domo Magna," e.g., the ospizio [hospital] where abandoned).[80]

gollark: No, the Mathematical Constants as a Service API is server-side.
gollark: RandomPiGeneratorFromInternetWithMultiplicationByTwo.
gollark: http://osmarks.tk/constants/tau/1000000
gollark: Big numbers.
gollark: I *make* numbers, myself.

See also

References

  1. "More men taking wives' last names". USA Today. 20 March 2007. Retrieved 6 March 2014.
  2. "EZ Name Change for Adult, Child, or Family Residents of California!". Archived from the original on 12 August 2013. Retrieved 6 February 2016.
  3. "Legal Change of Name Application – Province of British Columbia". www2.gov.bc.ca. Archived from the original on 28 January 2016. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 31 March 2013. Retrieved 10 March 2013.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. "Birth, Adoption, Death, Marriage & Divorce – Province of British Columbia". www.vs.gov.bc.ca. Archived from the original on 30 April 2001. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  6. ontario.ca
  7. servicecanada.gc.ca
  8. Gleanings from the mails; Maiden names. How an old Québec law annoys married women, lawyers, and tax-collectors, from the Montreal Witness, reprinted by The New York Times, 10 August 1880. Retrieved 1 April 2008.
  9. Civil Code of Québec Archived 9 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine, 14 March 2008. Retrieved 3 April 2008.
  10. Québec newlywed furious she can't take her husband's name Archived 2 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine, by Marianne White, CanWest News Service, 8 August 2007. Retrieved 1 April 2008.
  11. "Man files lawsuit to take wife's name". Archived from the original on 14 January 2007.
  12. Stannard, Una (1977). Mrs. Man GermainBooks, San Francisco. ISBN 0-914142-02-X, pp. 239–277.
  13. Stannard, Una (1977). Mrs Man. GermainBooks, San Francisco. ISBN 0-914142-02-X, pp. 277–282.
  14. Gorence, Patricia (1976). "Women's Name Rights". scholarship.law.
  15. Bander, Edward (1 January 1973). Change of name and law of names. Oceana Publications. pp. 37–38. ISBN 9780379110883. Retrieved 31 October 2017.
  16. "Hall v. Hall".
  17. Making a Name: Women's Surnames at Marriage and Beyond by Claudia Goldin and Maria Shim, Journal of Economic Perspectives.
  18. Krossa, Sharon L. "Early 16th Century Scottish Lowland Names". Medievalscotland.org. Retrieved 29 July 2010.
  19. Burns, James MacGregor (1956). 'Roosevelt' (vol. 1). Easton Press. ISBN 978-0-15-678870-0.
  20. Spender, Dale. Man-Made Language (1980), pp 24–25 of 1985 2nd Ed.
  21. Moss, Gabrielle. "Keeping Your Name After Marriage: 27 Women Talk About Why They Didn't Take Their Husband's Surnames". Bustle. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  22. Roiphe, Katie (24 March 2004). "The Maiden Name Debate". Slate.
  23. Kerr, Andrea Moore. Lucy Stone: Speaking Out for Equality. pp. 203–03. New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1992. ISBN 0-8135-1860-1
  24. Stannard, Una (1977). Mrs Man. GermainBooks, San Francisco. ISBN 0-914142-02-X, the entire Ch. 15 = "The Lucy Stone League" = pp. 188–218.
  25. Stannard, Una (1977). Mrs Man. GermainBooks, San Francisco. ISBN 0-914142-02-X, p. 191. For other property deeds, see p. 199.
  26. Stannard, Una (1977). Mrs Man. GermainBooks, San Francisco. ISBN 0-914142-02-X, p. 208.
  27. Stannard, Una (1977). Mrs Man. GermainBooks, San Francisco. ISBN 0-914142-02-X, p. 218.
  28. "Stuart v. Board of Elections, 295 A.2d 223, 266 Md. 440 –". Courtlistener.com. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
  29. "People ex rel. Rago v. Lipsky, 327 Ill. App. 63 | Casetext".
  30. Stannard, Una (1977). Mrs Man. GermainBooks, San Francisco. ISBN 0-914142-02-X, p. 262.
  31. Stannard, Una (1977). Mrs Man. GermainBooks, San Francisco. ISBN 0-914142-02-X, p. 263.
  32. "DAVIS v. ROOS| Fla. Dist. Ct. App. | Law". CaseMine. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
  33. http://ilj.law.indiana.edu/articles/85/85_3_Kim.pdf
  34. "Davis v. Roos, 326 So. 2d 226 –". Courtlistener.com. 3 February 1976. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  35. "Dunn v. Palermo, 522 S.W.2d 679 | Casetext".
  36. http://lucystoneleague.org/history.html The League's official history. To access it from the League's homepage: First click on the tab "Who are we?", and then on its button "LSL History".
  37. Emma Barnett, "Couples fuse surnames in new trend: 'I now pronounce you Mr and Mrs Puffin'", The Telegraph (9 November 2012).
  38. "Hillary Drops Her Maiden Name", The Brisbane Times, 30 April 2007. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  39. Tennessee State Code. Title 68. Chapter 3. Part 3. 68-3-305. Archived 18 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Father's name on birth certificate. -Surname of child.
  40. ABC News: ABC News Archived 23 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  41. "The Name Equality Act of 2007" (PDF). California Department of Public Health. January 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 December 2017. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  42. McDonough, Katie (30 January 2013). "Man who adopted his wife's last name is accused of fraud". Salon. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  43. Adams, David (29 January 2013). "Florida man's license restored as state drops fraud allegation". Reuters. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  44. Griffith, Elisabeth. In Her Own Right: The Life of Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Oxford University Press; New York, NY, 1985. ISBN 0-19-503729-4., p. xx (directly quoting Stanton)
  45. Kirstin Olsen (1994). Chronology of Women's History. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 122. ISBN 978-0-313-28803-6.
  46. "The Woman's Bible Index". Sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
  47. "(1860) Elizabeth Cady Stanton, "A Slave's Appeal" | The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed". The Black Past. 10 June 2010.
  48. Filipovic, Jill (7 March 2013). "Why should married women change their names? Let men change theirs | Jill Filipovic | Opinion". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  49. Appleman, Deborah (2014), Critical Encounters in Secondary English: Teaching Literacy Theory to Adolescents (third ed.), p. 85, Teachers College Press, ISBN 9780807756232
  50. Filipovic, Jill (2 May 2013). "The tragic irony of feminists trashing each other | Jill Filipovic | Opinion". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  51. "Jill Filipovic, Ty McCormick – The New York Times". Nytimes.com. 4 February 2018. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
  52. "Why I Changed My Mind About Marriage". Cosmopolitan.com. 13 February 2018.
  53. Levin, Josh (30 January 2008). "In What City Did You Honeymoon? And other monstrously stupid bank security questions". Slate. Archived from the original on 13 January 2010.
  54. Art. 55 Ley de Registro Civil – Civil Register Law (article in Spanish)
  55. "Cresce número de casadas que rejeitam o sobrenome do parceiro".
  56. http://www.bmeia.gv.at/en/embassy/london/practical-advice/consular-services/change-of-name.html%5B%5D
  57. Answer by the Ministry of the Interior to a question about the usage by married men of their wife's name
  58. Article 225-1 of the Civil Code
  59. "Déclaration de choix de nom – Consulat général de France à Toronto". Consulfrance-toronto.org. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  60. BGB – Einzelnorm (article in German)
  61. Doppelname als Familienname (article in German)
  62. "Greece Approves Family Law Changes". The New York Times. 26 January 1983. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  63. Long, Heather (6 October 2013). "Should women change their names after marriage? Ask a Greek woman". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Archived from the original on 6 October 2013. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  64. "Name change by effect of a marriage in Italy". wedding in Italy. Archived from the original on 13 April 2013. Retrieved 6 March 2013.
  65. "Wanneer mag ik de achternaam van mijn partner gebruiken?". Rijksoverheid.nl. 1 June 2010.
  66. "wetten.nl – Regeling – Burgerlijk Wetboek Boek 10 – BWBR0030068". wetten.overheid.nl. Retrieved 5 July 2016.
  67. "De keuze van de achternaam". Rijksoverheid.nl. 24 June 2009. Archived from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 29 July 2010.
  68. Tatlow, Didi. "For Chinese Women, a Surname Is Her Name". New York Times. Retrieved 12 August 2017.
  69. People's Daily. "Chinese surname shortage sparks rethink". 19 May 2007. Accessed 16 March 2012.
  70. فراهانی, سید جواد; میرشکاری, عباس (22 May 2015). "Adopting the Spouse's Surname After Marriage in Iranian and American Legal Systems". فقه و حقوق خانواده (ندای صادق). 20 (62): 77–94. Retrieved 7 October 2018.
  71. Adopting the Spouse's Surname After Marriage in Iranian and American Legal Systems by Abbas Mirshekari and Javad Farahani, Biannual Journal of Family Law and Jurisprudence. (article in Persian)
  72. Koffler, Jacob. "Here Are Places Women Can't Take Their Husband's Name When They Get Married". Time. Time Magazine. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  73. "Japanese women lose surname law case". BBC News. 16 December 2015. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  74. Caprio, Mark E. (10 February 2017). "Rationalizing Korea: The Rise of the Modern State, 1895–1945 by Kyung Moon Hwang (review)". Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 47 (4): 576–578. doi:10.1162/JINH_r_01079. ISSN 1530-9169.
  75. "Civil Code of the Philippines". Title XIII: Use of Surnames, Republic Act No. 386 of 18 June 1949.
  76. "Laws & Regulations Database and The Republic of China". law.moj.gov.tw. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  77. Royal Thai Consulate-General, Frankfurt am Main. การใช้ชื่อสกุลตามพระราชบัญญัติชื่อบุคคล (ฉบับที่ 3) พ.ศ. 2548 (in Thai). Archived from the original on 26 November 2011. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  78. "Married Women in Turkey may use their maiden name without husband's surname hereinafter". Birthname usage in Turkey. Archived from the original on 27 March 2016. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  79. "Prohibiting married women from retaining only maiden names a violation: Top court". Hürriyet Daily News. 8 January 2014. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  80. See David I. Kertzer, Sacrificed for Honor: Italian Infant Abandonment and the Politics of Reproductive Control (Boston: Beacon Press, 1993), at pp. 55–56, 113–122.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.