Africa In parts of
Africa, a traditional marriage ceremony depends on payment of a bride price to be valid. In Sub-Saharan Africa, bride price must be paid first in order for the couple to get permission to marry in church or in other civil ceremonies, or the marriage is not considered valid by the bride's family. The amount can vary from a token to a great sum, real estate and other values.
Lobolo (or Lobola, sometimes also known as Roora) is the same tradition in most cultures in
Southern Africa Xhosa, Shona, Venda, Zulu, Ndebele etc. The amount includes a few to several head of cattle, goats and a sum of money depending on the family. The cattle and goats constitute an integral part of the traditional marriage for ceremonial purposes during and after the original marriage ceremony. In some societies, marriage is delayed until all payments are made. If the wedding occurs before all payments are made, the status is left ambiguous. The bride price tradition can have destructive effects when young men don't have the means to marry. In strife-torn
South Sudan, many young men
steal cattle for this reason, often risking their lives.
Asia Western Asia Assyrians, who are indigenous people of
Western Asia, commonly practice the bride price (
niqda) custom. The
tradition would involve the bridegroom's family paying to the father of the bride. The amount of money of the niqda is reached by
negotiation between groups of people from both families. The
social state of the groom's family influences the amount of the bridewealth that ought to be paid. When the matter is settled to the contentment of both menages, the groom's father may kiss the hand of the bride's father to express his chivalrous regard and
gratitude. These situations are usually filmed and incorporated within the
wedding video.
Folk music and dancing is accompanied after the payment is done, which usually happens on the doorstep, before the bride leaves her home with her escort (usually a male family member who would then walk her into the church).
Central Asia In many parts of Central Asia nowadays, bride price is mostly symbolic. Various names for it in Central Asia include , , , and . It is also common in Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. The price may range from a small sum of money or a single piece of livestock to what amounts to a herd of livestock, depending on local traditions and the expectations and agreements of the families involved. The tradition is upheld in
Afghanistan. A "dark distortion" of it involved a 6-year-old daughter of an Afghan refugee from
Helmand Province in a Kabul refugee camp, who was to be married to the son of the money lender who provided with the girl's father $2500 so the man could pay medical bills. According to anthropologist
Deniz Kandiyoti, the practice increased after the fall of the
Taliban.
Thailand In
Thailand, bride price—
sin sod (Thai: สินสอด, pronounced [sĭn sòt] and often erroneously referred to by the English term "
dowry") is common in both Thai-Thai and Thai-foreign marriages. The bride price may range from nothing—if the woman is divorced, has a child fathered by another man, or is widely known to have had premarital relations with men—to tens of millions of
Thai baht (US$300,000 or ~9,600,000 THB) for a woman of high social standing, a beauty queen, or a highly educated woman. The bride price in Thailand is paid at the engagement ceremony, and consists of three elements: cash, Thai (96.5 percent pure) gold, and the more recent Western tradition of a diamond ring. The most commonly stated rationale for the bride price in Thailand is that it allows the groom to demonstrate that he has enough financial resources to support the bride (and possibly her family) after the wedding. In many cases, especially when the amount is large, the parents of a Thai bride will return all or part of the bride price to the couple in the form of a wedding gift following the engagement ceremony. It is also practised by Muslims in Thailand and is called
Mahr.
Kachin In
Kachin society they have the system of Mayu and Dama. "Mayu" means a group of people who give woman and "Dama" means a group of people who take woman. The “bride wealth” system is extremely important for kinship system in Kachin society and has been used for centuries. The purpose of giving "bride wealth" is to honor the wife giver "Mayu" and to create a strong relationship. The exact details of the “bride wealth” system vary by time and place. In Kachin society, bride wealth is required to be given by wife taker “Dama” to wife giver “Mayu.” Kachin ancestors thought that if wife takers “Dama” gave a large bride price to wife giver “Mayu”; it meant that they honored the bride and her family, and no one would look down on the groom and bride.
China In traditional
Chinese culture, an auspicious date is selected to
ti qin (), where both families will meet to discuss the amount of the bride price () demanded, among other things. Several weeks before the actual wedding, the ritual of
guo da li () takes place (on an auspicious date). The groom and a
matchmaker will visit the bride's family bearing gifts like wedding cakes,
sweetmeats and jewelry, as well as the bride price. On the actual wedding day, the bride's family will return a portion of the bride price (sometimes in the form of
dowry) and a set of gifts as a goodwill gesture. Bride prices varies by eras, for instance during the
Republican era, bride prices were usually in a form of a sack of rice or wheat. However bride prices were sent in secret during the Cultural Revolution following a public discouragement on bride price, which was seen as a feudalist legacy. Since Deng's reform, bride prices vary from in famously money-centric Shanghai to as little as . A house is often required along with the bride price (an apartment is acceptable, but rentals are not) and a car under both or only the bride's name, none counted toward the bride price itself. May 18 is a particularly auspicious day on which to pay the bride price and marry, as its Chinese wording is phonetically similar to "I will get rich". Financial distress is an unacceptable and ignored justification for not paying the bride price. If the grooms' side cannot agree or pay, they or simply the groom himself must still pay a bride price, thus, borrowing from relatives is a popular if not required option to "
save face". Inability to pay is cause for preventing a marriage which either side can equally recommend. Privately, families need bride prices due to China's lack of a social security net, and a
one child policy which leaves parents with neither retirement funding nor caretaking if their only child is taken away, as brides typically move into the groom's residence upon marrying, as well as to test the groom's ability to marry by paying cash and emotionally giving up his resources to the bride. and that the bride price creates goodwill between families. The groom's side should pay more than what the bride's side has demanded to "save face". Amounts preferably follow the usual
red envelope conventions though the sum is far more important. Attempts to tackle skyrocketing bride prices were also done by the
Ministry of Civil Affairs by implementing marriage reforms, with involves capping the maximum amount of bride price which was implemented by trial in several regions, notably Chengdu, Guangzhou and Shenyang, apart from the ruling from the
Supreme People's Court dated 17 January 2024 regarding the prohibition of demanding property under the name of marriage, which includes bride price that allows cases for reimbursement. Changing patterns in the betrothal and marriage process in some rural villages of modern China can be represented as the following stages: •
Ti qin , "propose a marriage"; •
He tian ming , "Accord with Heaven's mandate" (i.e. find a ritually auspicious day); •
Jian mian , "looking in the face", i.e. meeting; •
Ding hun , "being betrothed"; •
Yao ri zi , "asking the wifegivers the date of the wedding"; and •
Jie xin ren , "transferring the bride". It is also practised by
Uyghurs, among whom it is called
Mahr.
Indian subcontinent It is still practised by Muslims in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh and is called
Mahr. In North East India, notably in Assam (the indigenous Assamese ethnic groups) an amount or token of bride price was and is still given in various forms. In some parts of Indian state of Gujarat, bride price is rather prevalent, resulting from the fact that there are lesser number of girls than boys in the society.
Myanmar It is still practised by Muslims, known as
Rohingyas in Myanmar, especially in
Rakhine State and is called
Mahr. == Determinants of bride price ==