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Patrilineality is a way identifying ancestry through the father or male line.
There is no other principle in competition with patrilineality.
This system was designed to protect their traditions of patrilineality and primogeniture.
However, there is disagreement split along ideological lines about whether patrilineality would have existed before modern times.
Credence for patrilineality as being standard can best Identified in the book of Malachi.
Both patrilineality and matrilineality are types of unilineal descent.
Chinese kinship is agnatic, emphasising patrilineality.
Slavonic-speaking societies tended to follow the general Indo-European pattern of patrilineality, passing down property and rights from father to son.
By Ming and Qing dynasties, laws have defined the patrilineality of the nine kindreds.
Matrilocality and Patrilineality in Mundurucu Society.
- Matrilineality (compare Patrilineality)
It has developed unique socio-religious elements, which include a non-monastic Buddhist society based on the Newar caste system and patrilineality.
Prior to this, only the samurai class was restricted to a system of patrilineality and so within Japanese society various familial forms and regional variation existed.
Karaite Judaism holds that Judaism can only be transmitted through the father, and thus holds a rule of patrilineality.
The Paite had a similar system, strongly based on primogeniture and patrilineality and reinforced by a characteristic system of name-giving:
Both hyperdescent and hypodescent vary from, and may not be mutually exclusive with, other methods of determining lineage, such as patrilineality and matrilineality.
The Nnewi monarchy, like the British monarchy, is a traditional inheritance of the throne based on Patrilineality and sonship heredity.
Stearns descends patrilineality from a New England family, most of his ancestors having immigrated from England to Massachusetts in the early 17th century.
Parallel practices include patrilineality, matrilineality and cognatic descent, which assign race according to the father, mother, or some combination, without regard to the race of the other parent.
Patrilineality, also known as the male line or agnatic kinship, is a common kinship system in which an individual's family membership derives from and is traced through his or her father's lineage.
Karaite Judaism interprets the Torah to indicate that Jewishness passes exclusively through the father's line, thus maintaining the system of patrilineality, that many scholars believe was the practice of ancient Israel.
They tried to appeal to upper-class audiences by emphasising royalist political and social ideals: monarchy is the natural form of government; patriarchal authority decisive in education and marriage; and patrilineality preeminent in inheritance and ownership of property.
In 1874 when the Tongan constitution was created, the king wanted to prevent European colonization so a law was made stating that only Tongan men could own land and that land would be inherited through patrilineality and primogeniture.
The organization of once predominantly herder Gheg tribes was traditionally based on patrilineality (a system in which an individual belongs to his or her father's lineage), and on exogamy (a social arrangement where marriage is allowed only outside of a social group).
Other aspects of social organization among Canadian hunters are discussed in the chapter by June Helm and Eleanor Leacock, and a shift from matrilineality to patrilineality is dealt with in Averkieva's chapter on the Tlingit of the Northwest coast.