Book detail: Of Domestical Duties is presented as a focused source page for quotations connected with this book, collection, transcript, or source record.
This work belongs to the genre of domestic conduct literature that flourished in early modern England, offering guidance on household governance and interpersonal relationships within the family unit. Such texts typically examined the hierarchical structure of the household, addressing duties of husbands, wives, parents, children, and servants from a moral and theological perspective. The tradition drew heavily upon biblical precedent and classical sources, reflecting Protestant concerns with proper ordering of the Christian household as a microcosm of wider social stability. Books of this nature were part of a broader cultural project to define and regulate behavior within the emerging nuclear family, often emphasizing patriarchal authority alongside mutual obligations. The exact authorship and precise date of this particular title would require verification against bibliographic records, as multiple works with similar titles and themes circulated during this period.
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