Capacity to Marry - Absolute Disqualification
Certain persons were absolutely disqualified by the Roman law to marry. They were :
- Slaves. These could not marry, but they could enter into a union known as confubernium, which was practically the same as marriage, though without legal force.
- Persons under the age of puberty (fourteen years for males and twelve for females). But if a girl married under age remained with her husband until she became of age (twelve), she became his legal wife.
- Persons already married. Polygamy was never lawful among the Romans. But a person whose husband or wife had been five years in captivity could marry again without dissolving the first marriage.
- A woman prosecuted for adultery could not marry unless she was acquitted or the prosecution was abandoned. If convicted she could not marry.
- A female slave manumitted by her master for the purpose of marrying him, could not marry anyone but him, unless he gave her up. If she refused him, she could not marry another, even with his consent.