Antoine Banier: Difference between revisions

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'''Antoine Banier''' is seems to be the first author to have used the term "involuntary celibacy" within the corpus of books that are digitalized on Google Books. While it could be the case that even older documents have used this term or a similar one, at least this proves [[inceldom]] is not a new phenomenon at all. Banier was a French clergyman born on 2 November 1673 and passed away on 2 November 1741. In a 1739 book he described [[inceldom]] as a form of imprisonment which he referred to as "yoke". He also described it as a form of suffering and anguish, as "groan". The unabbreviated form of ''[[incel]]'' was coined in the following excerpt from The Mythology and Fables of the Ancients, Explain'd from History, Volume 3<ref>https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=kHgno9bqs4UC&pg=PA527&dq=%22involuntary+celibacy%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiGrMy9z4neAhUJJsAKHfVJCeEQ6AEIODAD#v=onepage&q=%22involuntary%20celibacy%22&f=false</ref>:
'''Antoine Banier''' seems to be the first author to have used the term "involuntary celibacy" within the corpus of books that are digitalized on Google Books. While it could be the case that even older documents have used this term or a similar one which may have been lost, not digitalized or wrongly digitalized, at least this proves [[inceldom]] is not a new phenomenon at all. Banier was a French clergyman born on 2 November 1673 and passed away on 2 November 1741. In a 1739 book he described [[inceldom]] as a form of imprisonment which he referred to as "yoke". He also described it as a form of suffering and anguish, as "groan". The unabbreviated form of ''[[incel]]'' was coined in the following excerpt from The Mythology and Fables of the Ancients, Explain'd from History, Volume 3<ref>https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=kHgno9bqs4UC&pg=PA527&dq=%22involuntary+celibacy%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiGrMy9z4neAhUJJsAKHfVJCeEQ6AEIODAD#v=onepage&q=%22involuntary%20celibacy%22&f=false</ref>:


{{Quote|The custom of the Ancients in their marriages was quite different from that of the age wherein we live: large gratifications were given to the young ladies whom they were to marry, and even to their parents, whereas it is very rare now-a-days for one to marry a woman without a portion. Homer and several others, mention this Custom, and would to God it were still in Fashion: How many young Women who groan under the Yoke of '''involuntary Celibacy''', would find Husbands to make them happy, did not the Avarice of those husbands reduce them to the calamities wherein ixion was involved.|The Mythology and Fables of the Ancients, Explain'd from History, Volume 3}}
{{Quote|The custom of the Ancients in their marriages was quite different from that of the age wherein we live: large gratifications were given to the young ladies whom they were to marry, and even to their parents, whereas it is very rare now-a-days for one to marry a woman without a portion. Homer and several others, mention this Custom, and would to God it were still in Fashion: How many young Women who groan under the Yoke of '''involuntary Celibacy''', would find Husbands to make them happy, did not the Avarice of those husbands reduce them to the calamities wherein ixion was involved.|The Mythology and Fables of the Ancients, Explain'd from History, Volume 3}}
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