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Men's Houses

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Men’s Houses 

in primitive societies, buildings in which unmarried men and sometimes all the men of a village lived together. Men’s meetings, ceremonies, and receptions for guests were held in these houses. Men’s houses or their vestiges may be found throughout the world. As with the less common girls’ houses, they are connected with divisions according to sex and age in primitive society. Possibly they originated in the segregation of men and women in early clan communes. Men’s houses became especially important during the transition from the matriarchal to the patriarchal clan, when they became the centers of activity of men’s societies.



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The men's houses themselves were left to decay or were transformed into recreational 'wind houses' accessible to all: men, women and children.
Sir Donald Irvine, the committee chairman, slammed the doctor for abusing his position to enter the two elderly men's houses and indecently assault them.
The secret world inside men's houses was an oasis of conviviality and assurance.
 
 
 
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