This just came to mind because I genuinely am just curious, but off the top of my head, 'if she bleeds' was never something that a predominantly white society practiced, not even the medieval period.
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I'm not a history buff, but I believe the general consensus amongst historians is that, in ancient European societies, marriage for women was legal after puberty, usually around 14 years of age.
Regardless, the trolls are still retards.
Even then, it was mostly noble children that would get married that young due to how important marriages were for the nobles, so it was still no where near as common as widely believed.
One thing I was wondering, because arranged noble marriages for diplomatic purposes did come to mind—when a pair of very young (12-14, say) nobles "married" did they actually consummate the marriages immediately, or did they wait? Like how there are historical examples of extremely young "kings," but in practice those kings would have a regent ruling for them until they came of age.
Probably depended quite a bit on how vital it was that they create an heir.
Beyond that though, I'm unsure. How much social pressure the young married couple would experience might be rather rooted in their culture, which can vary a bit from one European country to another on something like that.