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Meat Reacting to Polygamia Triumphatrix By Johann Lyser

Give us the elevator pitch on this book.
This book is a forceful pro-polygamy polemic, arguing specifically for male polygyny: one husband having several wives. From the sections visible in the translation, the author treats marriage not as adultery or concubinage but as a lawful marital arrangement that, he says, is compatible with natural law, divine law, civil law, and the law of nations. A major part of the book is devoted to attacking "anti-polygamists" and insisting that they are mistaken because Scripture never plainly forbids patriarchal polygamy. The author repeatedly appeals to biblical figures such as Abraham, Jacob, David, and Solomon, presenting their multiple marriages as evidence that polygyny can be a real and legitimate form of marriage.

A second major topic is the claim that marriage is primarily a civil or political institution, not essentially an ecclesiastical sacrament. The author leans heavily on legal and political reasoning, citing Roman law, canon-law disputes, Protestant writers, and reform-era arguments about magistrates' authority over marriage. He argues that churches, especially under what he sees as later Catholic distortions, wrongly turned marriage into a sacramental mechanism of control. In that sense, the book is not only about household arrangements; it is also about who has authority to define marriage - priests and theologians, or civil rulers and political communities.

The book also spends a great deal of time on gender hierarchy and household order. Its defense of polygyny is tied to an overtly patriarchal theory: the husband is said to rule, the wife to obey, and women are repeatedly described as naturally subordinate and suited to domestic life. The author argues that multiple wives improve the household by increasing fertility, childrearing capacity, domestic labor, and sexual regulation, especially when one wife is pregnant, ill, or otherwise unavailable. He also insists that polygyny is better than adultery, fornication, or illicit sex because it channels male desire into a formally recognized household structure.

So the author's conclusion is quite clear: he believes male polygamy is lawful, natural, scriptural, socially useful, and unjustly condemned. He rejects the idea that monogamy is the only divinely intended form of marriage, arguing instead that monogamy may be common but is not universally binding by nature or by Scripture. That said, this summary should be treated cautiously because the document is a machine-generated translation and some passages are visibly garbled or unstable. Even so, the overall line of argument is consistent enough to say with confidence that the work is a learned, legal-theological defense of patriarchal polygyny against both religious and civil critics.
 
Here is one controversial quote that got some discussion.

"Since there are indeed many kinds of servitude, I know not whether any can be called more severe and detestable than that domestic slavery by which a head of a household submits to his wife, ready to sail at her nod and pleasure for all her desires."
Wow, some things don’t change do they? When was this guy writing?
 
Can you, please, as custom provide PDF version.

Don't use docx. Not everyone uses Microsoft Office as document software, so there is possibility of finding "garbage" when opening with some other software.

PDF as format is just more reliable.
Here it is. This is a good idea, now I will be able to put it in Kindle.
 

Attachments

A second major topic is the claim that marriage is primarily a civil or political institution, not essentially an ecclesiastical sacrament.
The Roman church completely screwed up most of Christian thought on marriage. Only the most rebellious, free church movements rejected the bulk of Catholic nonsense. Most of Protestantism and subsequent evangelicalism in the west still sees marriage through a false lenses, limited and governed by clergy or church leadership.
 
I used Sonnet 4.6 from Claude because they are good for long documents, editing, polished writing. I have not removed original Latin. You may find this translation may be best for studying. I hope you enjoy discovering this forgotten pioneer. It is a pleasure to compare notes with what we have discovered.

Interpreter's notes (1,100 added)
Flagged wherever the translation required judgment about intent, not just word choice:

Dense Roman/Canon Law citation passages — explains Lyser is arguing legally, not just theologically
Luther quotations — flags where Lyser selectively quotes Luther beyond what Luther's full writings support
Classical allusions (Horace, Cicero, Ovid, Juvenal) — restored for readers who wouldn't recognize them
Shifts from argument to polemic — marks where Lyser moves from evidence to advocacy
All pseudonyms replaced (10 variant forms)
Every form of Theophilus Alethes/Aletheus/Alethaeus/Alebro, Athanasius Vincentius, Aletnea, Theophilo Aethico, and partial OCR fragments → Johann Lyser throughout.

Modernized to 12th-grade English
All archaic constructions updated — whence, thence, nay, velification, parasangs, methinks, Latin terms glossed inline — while preserving the rhetorical structure of Lyser's arguments.
 

Attachments

I found it interesting way to extract information from this voluminous work. After reviewing Cliff Notes to discover what topics are covered I asked Ai a question to produce answer to a question based on Lyser's work. I asked the following questions: "According to material discussed in these files, how does a man help his wives to deal with jealousy?" , and then I followed with the question, "how does husband maintain his authority according to point number 5? how does husbands become too soft?"

Here is sample to the question "how does husbands become too soft?"

Answer:
Lyser is quite specific about the causes. He treats this as a social epidemic, especially in the Dutch Republic (which he singles out as having "more slaves of wives... than any region under heaven").

1. Excessive love for the wife

Luther's letter and Lyser's own commentary both name this directly: a husband who "out of excessive love or other causes so subjects himself to his wife that he is governed by her and lives entirely according to her nod like a servant." Affection, in their view, becomes dangerous when it overrides the husband's duty to govern.

2. Idleness and unrestrained luxury

Lyser describes "servile natures who, through idleness and unrestrained luxury, accept and endure the yoke of wives upon their broad shoulders." Men who are comfortable and idle lose the drive to assert themselves.

3. The false belief that wives have equal rights

He identifies this as the "chief factor" — a "deeply rooted opinion in human minds: namely, that a woman possesses equal rights with her husband." Once a husband believes this, he treats her complaints and demands as legitimate, and his own authority as negotiable. The whole structure collapses from that false premise.

4. Monogamy itself

Lyser's systemic argument: because monogamy gives the wife a monopoly — she knows her husband "can hardly institute any divorce or take another wife, but must adhere solely to herself" — she stops trying to please him and starts commanding him. He writes vividly that after the wedding, a monogamous wife "openly manifests herself, seeking pleasures, indulging in leisure, finding fault, commanding, and carousing" — because she has nothing to lose. The husband is then tormented until he flees to "taverns and various diversions," which further erodes household order.

5. Legal reforms that gave wives too many rights

He blames Justinian specifically for granting wives so many legal protections that "the husband can scarcely breathe or lift his head." He notes bitterly that in ancient Rome and Judea, only the husband could accuse the wife — not the reverse — and that this asymmetry was what kept wives in "fear and reverence." The equalization of marital rights under Christian law, in his view, directly produced soft husbands.

The short version: Lyser sees soft husbands as a product of false theology (equal rights), bad law (Justinian), comfortable idleness, misplaced affection, and the structural trap of monogamy. His cure is early assertion of authority, firm correction up to and including physical discipline, polygamy as a structural check on any single wife's power, and a return to the ancient Roman/Hebrew legal asymmetry where the husband alone had the power to judge and punish.


Obviously, this has to be vetted through Scriptures, but I find it interesting what and how an advocate for polygyny thought 350 years ago.

On separate note I discovered cool word 'uxorious:' - excessively fond of or submissive to a wife, doting upon, foolishly fond of, or affectionately submissive toward one's wife.
 
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