Dissolution of Marriage
A marriage was, of course, dissolved by the death of either party. It was also dissolved by either party's falling into a condition analogous to that of the civil death of the English law, as ,by being reduced to captivity (in which case the doctrine of postliminium did not apply) or slavery by any other mode; or by loss of citizenship (if the other party wished to give up the marriage).
Again, it might be dissolved by a change in family relationship, as where a father-in-law adopts his son-in-law (by marriage, without inanus) so that he becomes the adoptive brother of his wife. This result might be avoided, however, by the father's first emancipating his daughter.
A marriage could also be dissolved by the pater familias of the wife, where being married without maniis, she remained under her father's pofestas. Under the old law, the paterfamilias could take his daughter from her husband regardless of their wishes, but under the legislation of the Empire a father could not disturb a harmonious union unless for very weighty reasons.