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Dec 7, 2023 · Ever wonder why do women take their husband's last name? We explain the origins of the tradition and offer surname alternatives.
- Sarah Zlotnick
Sep 3, 2023 · I didn't take my husband's last name and we've been happily married for nearly 17 years. If we'd chosen to have kids (yes, another choice, not a law), we would've given the kids both of our names. There's no need for women to lose their identities when they marry.
- Jisha Joseph
As you may have guessed, the tradition of women taking their husbands’ surnames stems from Western society’s patriarchal history. In Britain, hereditary last names are only around a millennia old, imported by the French around the time of the Norman Conquest.
Taking a husband’s name emerged from patriarchal history. So why do so many young western couples still follow the tradition? Planning a wedding during a pandemic is riddled with uncertainties,...
Sep 6, 2018 · Although the norm that women take their husband’s last name at marriage may be weakening, it remains nearly ubiquitous. In a sample of married couples in the U.S. in 1980, 98.6 percent of...
Jul 19, 2022 · Decades ago, newly married women overwhelmingly would adopt their husband’s last name, satisfying a social custom and securing certain legal, economic and familial protections.
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Nov 30, 2023 · A 2023 survey from Pew Research showed four out of five women in the United States who married men took their husband’s last name. Why does this tradition remain so engrained? Suzanna Danuta Walters, director of women’s, gender, and sexuality studies at Northeastern University.