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Rome lacked the elaborate female puberty rituals of ancient Greece, and for girls, the wedding ceremony was in part a rite of passage for the bride. Girls coming of age dedicated their dolls to Artemis, the goddess most concerned with virginity, or to Aphrodite when they were preparing for marriage. [5]
The seclusion of girls at puberty has been practised in societies around the world, especially prior to the early 20th century. In such cultures, girls' puberty held more significance than boys' due to menstruation, the girl's potential for giving birth, and widespread ideas of ritual purification related to the sacred power of blood. [1]
This milestone in a girl's life is observed by her family and friends with gifts and her wearing a sari for the ritual. [3] [4] It normally takes place at the girl's home. [1] She receives half-saris, worn until her marriage, when she wears a full sari. [1] During the first part of the ceremony, the girl wears a langa voni.
Rituals to celebrate adulthood have existed since ancient times, such as Genpuku (changing to adult clothing) and Fundoshi-iwai (loincloth celebration) for boys and Mogi (dressing up) and Keppatsu (tying the hair up) for girls. [3] Cultural anthropology and folklore studies treat such ceremonies as rites of passage (initiations).
Jewish boy reading a Torah scroll at his Bar Mitzvah, using a Yad Land diving is a rite of passage for boys of the South Pacific island of Pentecost The Mawé people in the Amazon rainforest intentionally use bullet ant stings as a rite of passage into manhood.
Elsewhere, [17] the Mishnah lists the ages (13 for boys and 12 for girls) at which a vow is considered automatically valid; the Talmud explains this as a result of the 13-year-old being a "man", as required in Numbers 6:2. [18] (For one year before this age, the vows are conditionally valid, depending on whether the boy or girl has signs of ...
Precocious puberty on the rise. In the mid-19th century, girls had their first periods — which typically come about two years after they begin to show signs of breasts or pubic hair — at age ...
c. Religious transformation - sacrifice rituals, acceptance of a belief, functions related to changing life stages, circumcision. [4] d. Biological development - pregnancy, childbirth, birth, puberty, menopause. [4] e. Marital ceremonies. [4] f. Death - burial, cremation, prayers (include all stages of separation, transition and reincorporation ...