Most men in my ancestry remarried rather soon after the death of their 
spouses.  The women in the 1600s and 1700s seemed to re-marry though not 
"right away".  There seems to have been some kind of religious rebirth in 
the 1800's and well into the first half of the 1900's what with all the 
Maria's and religious middle names and the extended widowhood of my many 
female ancestors.  I remember in the 1950s visiting cousins of my father 
and there was invariably one or two old women sitting in a corner, all 
dressed in black with their rosary, rocking back and forth with their eyes 
shut praying for their dead husbands.  They were so involved in their 
prayers they didn't even acknowledge visitors.  All this for husbands who 
had been dead twenty or thirty years.
David

On Friday, March 8, 2013 11:25:38 PM UTC-8, Paul wrote:

> If a married person died say in the 1800's was there a set length of time 
> the surviving spouse mourned before they remarried? I ask this because my 
> paternal ggg grandmother died sometime after giving birth to my gg 
> grandmother in 1852.
>  
> Paul G.
>

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