Tumgik
#marriage contract
Text
Prompt #33
Rich Villain: I'll give up crime and even give you half of everything
Hero: Everything, everything?
Villain: Everything, everything. Just sign this to make it official
Hero: *looks over the form* Everything seems in order — wait... this is a marriage contract...
Inspired by Lego Movie 2
75 notes · View notes
shewhoworshipscarlin · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
Marriage contract, between groom Isaac, son of Joseph, and bride Ayda, daughter of Solomon, 1950, Essaouira, Morocco.
77 notes · View notes
schtrawberry · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
UEE AND LEE SEO JIN AS KANG HYE SOO AND HAN JI HOON IN 결혼계약 MARRIAGE CONTRACT (2016)
21 notes · View notes
dangermousie · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Bwahaha this is the first time I've seen someone actually come out of the vehicle they are driving to look at the accident they caused.
And he didn't even hit her! Normally they total someone and still don't come out. Now you know this drama is different :P
18 notes · View notes
tyrantking31 · 2 months
Text
Trans Toshinori
Okay, so, this is obvy an AU, but I have different ones running through my head, and one that I just can't get out of my mind is where he is trans, but he came from a rich background, Todoroki style right? But his parents are soo homophobic and transphobic, so instead of listening to him and reading the signs, they sign him up for a marriage contract from a stupid young age. To- you guessed it- Endeavour.
However whenever Toshi goes to UA, and does his whole Nana training thing, they find out and get him out of the situation. But, you cant get out of a marriage contract w/out both parties agreeing, so Nana gets Toshi transitioned and when he hits 17/18 he looks like a total hunk, yadda yadda. Endeavour hates that, his parents absolutely do not approve, break off the contract, they yell at his biological parents, etc. etc.
Everything else goes how it goes, we get to UA, then Shoto Todoroki's whole abuse case comes out with Touya. And All Might is pissed, so he posts a video explaining his past showing the almost marriage contract, and the song playing in the background is "You Should Be Sad" by Halsey.
Im so happy I never ever had a baby with you, cuz you can't love nothing unless there's something in it for you
13 notes · View notes
faesystem · 1 year
Text
I am making a Bowuigi fanfiction based on this fanfiction series. I need some opinions to assist me in making some decisions. Poll at the end.
The first thing that I want to figure out is how exactly Luigi ends up in the marriage contract.
A1. It was entirely an accident. Luigi was dressed up as Peach and Bowser did not know it was him. (Same as the fanfiction series.)
A2. The biggest motive Bowser had for kidnapping and marrying Peach is due to a cultural context in which marriage between royal families unites the kingdoms and forces them to work together. Bowser's father, the previous king, was poisoned and killed by a Toad. When the Koopas retaliated, the Mushroom Kingdom cut off all trade with them. The Dark Lands is a very difficult place to grow food and his people are starving, and the Mushroom Kingdom refuses to listen to any and all attempts at negotiation. Peach and Mario got married, making Luigi the prince. Bowser realised that he would probably be able to get Luigi to sign the contract, bringing peace to his people. Also, it would mean he would win against Mario, as he would be able to keep Luigi from him without him able to rescue him without violating the treaty and causing war.
A3. Similar to above, except Bowser did not know Peach and Mario were married and made a spontaneous decision to get Luigi to sign instead of Peach after he found out.
The second involves the sort of headcanons I include in the story.
There are many headcanons I have with canonical basis or are held by a lot of the fandom that I will include. For example, I headcanon Luigi as disabled and transgender.
However, I have some that while they are reasonable and justified within the lore of my story, are a bit more. Out there I suppose you could say. The biggest example I have is that I believe Luigi struggles with addiction. In my headcanon of it, it began in highschool with alcohol and weed mostly, and with Mario's help he became sober as he reached adulthood. However, after they moved to the Mushroom Kingdom and began leading very dangerous lives, his addiction came back full force. He has most of his addictions under control because he cannot risk being unable to help if the need arises because he was too intoxicated, but he is very addicted to nicotine since its effects are short and do not stop him from being able to help if something happens suddenly.
B1. Stick mostly to headcanons based in canon and fanon.
B2. Include the headcanons that are a bit more out there.
B3. I don't care provided it's justified in lore.
35 notes · View notes
harmonyandco · 10 months
Note
Harry is trapped in a marriage contract that has no voluntary means that he can use to get out of. However, there are clauses for getting kidnapped and other uncertain fates, so Hermione decides to kidnap Harry and hopes that Greengrass uses the window of opportunity to marry someone else.
via @johnburtonlee
22 notes · View notes
spicymotte · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
new character sheets for Andy and Liam! they are business partners, bound by a demonic (marriage) contract
23 notes · View notes
elementsofemily1193 · 8 months
Text
Hello Tumblr!💓
Hope everyone is having a good day! I haven’t updated you on my stories in quite awhile but I posted a new chapter of my Chenford Fanfic: Sinking into the Song of your Heart on Ao3, and it could use a little love! I also started a new Chenford fic (because I’m obsessed) called Business and Brushstokes: A marriage contract AU, so if you like my work then you might really like that! Thank you for your continued support to a longtime fan but new writer.
9 notes · View notes
bleachluna · 9 months
Text
I have finally posted chapter 2 of Marriage Contract! I hope you enjoy it! <3
14 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
New Life Begins. 8
Story: 9
Acting: 10
Chemistry: 10
Comparable to: ?
This drama is the type where either fans will love it or hate it. The storyline narrative deals heavy on feminism and in my opinion does it flawlessly in a historically fictional setting. It’s hilarious (satire in this is on point), romantic, and entertaining. The acting all around is phenomenal with such an amazing cast. I actually was more for the second main couple then the mains though (Chang Long/5th prince, Liu Ling Zi ) don’t get me wrong loved Bai Jing Ting and Tian Xi Wei in the first half of the drama somewhere in the middle half though, they lost the spark a tiny bit for me especially with the whole slight spoiler (‘new wife part). This is definitely a recommend for me. Loved it to bits, even if it may get sketchy with the main leads during the middle.
13 notes · View notes
shewhoworshipscarlin · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
Muslim marriage contract for conversos, 1800s, Iran.
29 notes · View notes
Text
A Midsummer Night's Deal - Thomas Shelby x Original Female Character - Peaky Blinders
”Aristocrats and gangsters have a lot in common.
They’re both selfish, get bored easily, and have access to wads of cash they didn’t work honestly to get and neither have any interest in bourgeois rules or morality.”
So when Thomas Shelby manages to marry into that world, to a woman whose blood is almost as blue as that cursed sapphire of his, a perfect match. The only result one could expect, was purely success.
Well...
...on the outside, at least.
Tumblr media
2 notes · View notes
dangermousie · 2 months
Text
youtube
My next modern kdrama watch. Age gap contract marriage with possibly terminal illness angst.
Also, am a huge fan of Lee Seo Jin...
14 notes · View notes
sharonanelie · 2 years
Text
I hear people asking SML who? Well its too early to say but the ML has got all the boxes ticked for him and m swooooooning..
He is tooooo cute
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
sml has to up his game or maybe fall for our housemate cos i know u know what I mean 😛😛😛🙃🙃
Chokiyooo in the back i mean same brooo same!!!!!
43 notes · View notes
handeaux · 5 months
Text
Cincinnati Gasped At The Idea Of ‘Trial Marriages,’ But Practiced Them Anyway
Judge Stanley Struble was fed up. As he looked over his docket in 1929, the judge grew suspicious that the Hamilton County Courts were being forced into abetting the immoral practice known as the “trial marriage.” It was increasingly common, Struble noticed, for Ohio teenagers to elope to Northern Kentucky, where marriage laws were much looser, and then, when the match proved unsatisfactory, to ask Ohio courts to annul the union on the basis of their immaturity. Judge Struble told the Cincinnati Post [30 November 1929]:
“These marriages seem to be becoming a habit among youthful couples, and clerks who issue licenses in such cases seem to be interested only in obtaining the fees, the same as would appear the case of those who perform these marriage ceremonies.”
Judge Struble held two annulment appeals aside until further investigation revealed the motivation behind those cases. The couples placed under the microscope were Leola Stouder McCloskey, who testified that she was only 16 when she married 19-year-old William McCloskey in Covington in 1926 and Elizabeth Bruenen Edwards, married at age 16 to Robert Edwards in Newport, also in 1926. In neither case did any testimony reveal why each couple had waited three years before seeking annulment.
Tumblr media
Judge Struble was reacting to a controversial topic that had stirred debate in Cincinnati since at least 1906 – the idea that temporary marriages, giving couples a no-fault option to leave the marriage after a brief trial period, were the solution to the social problems of divorce. The idea was most popularly promoted by pioneering anthropologist Elsie Clews Parsons in her 1906 book, “The Family.” Almost from the day it was published, Doctor Parsons’ book was widely (if surreptitiously) read and just as widely condemned. The Post [23 November 1906] was editorially outraged, claiming that it was already too easy to terminate a marriage:
“The reform is needed in the other direction. We need to get rid of the feeling that marriage is a mere experiment.”
In condemning the concept of trial marriage, The Post had lots of company. Doctor Sarah Siewers, one of Cincinnati’s foremost suffragists, told the Post [20 November 1906]:
“Abominable! Who ever heard of a woman making such a fool of herself? Why, the plan Mrs. Parsons proposes means the end of society and the home and a reversal to the dark ages. The whole thing is disgusting to me. The only solution to the divorce problem is for men to behave themselves better and for women to insist on being treated as equals, not as inferiors or slaves.”
Mrs. Jessie Oliphant, described as a “Norwood club woman,” declined to comment:
“It is a very serious problem that Mrs. Parsons has started out to solve. The subject is very distasteful to me and I would rather not discuss it.”
Judge John A Caldwell was four-square against the idea:
“Trial marriage could be no marriage at all, and would ultimately destroy the marriage relation altogether. Such a system would destroy the home, the greatest of all our institutions, and would illegitimatize thousands of children”
The more opinions the Post published in opposition to trial marriage, the more letters it received in support of the concept. Furniture dealer Maurice C. Williams wrote [26 November 1906]:
“The views of Mrs. Parsons, as expressed in the book, ‘The Family,’ are as the faint rays of a dawning day which become gradually more resplendent until the shimmering light gives way to the sun in all its glory, casting its benignant influence over all. So it will be with man. The ideas advanced are along the lines of altruism.”
In the same issue, cabinet maker Fred Walthard (Yes, most of the supporters of trial marriage were men.) wrote:
“The majority of marriage ceremonies still take place in churches or similar places, where a priest is the ‘matador.’ But you don’t find one couple out of a thousand that are advanced enough to seek the judgement of a reliable physician concerning their match. I am afraid the divorce problem will never be solved so long as law and religion have everything to say about marriage and science nothing.”
An unnamed judge of the Hamilton County courts dabbled in statistics and informed the Cincinnati Post [28 October 1909] that all marriages were trial marriages anyway, and that he had the data to prove it. Looking over his cases for the past month, the judge found 140 divorce suits. Of these, 107 requests for divorce were filed by couples married less than 10 years:
“’Proving,’ said a Judge of the Hamilton-co. courts, ‘that marriage is naturally a 10-year-trial proposition. The figures indicate to me that couples who manage to live together for 10 years will in most cases stay married the rest of their lives, and the couples unsuited for each other usually find it out before 10 years are over.”
The anonymous judge scoffed at the idea of a trial marriage, since his experience showed that all marriages had a natural trial period built in. A closer look at his numbers revealed that 73 divorces – more than half of the month’s total – involved marriages that had not yet marked a five-year anniversary.
Spotting a saucy topic, the entertainment industry jumped on the trial marriage bandwagon. Cincinnati audiences enjoyed a play and a couple of silent films based on the trial marriage concept.
As late as the rock ‘n’ roll era, the Post’s medical advice columnist, Dr. George W. Crane, warned young women to avoid over-sexed men who proposed this immoral arrangement [16 September 1958]:
“Trial marriage usually is suggested by a person who may feel sexual infatuation but no true love. And there is a whale of a difference! Trial marriage definitely does NOT benefit the girl. She makes the sacrifices and is likely to be left pregnant and unable to earn a living for herself.”
Tumblr media
6 notes · View notes