BY TORCHES, BONES, AND TEMPLES

Oath-taking during Roman Antiquity constitutes a telling example of how words and material matter interplay and relate to one another. Ancient Latin literature provides a myriad of representations of oaths sworn, both fictive and supposedly historical, which allude to contemporary notions of materiality. In this study, a selection of personal oaths (oaths sworn between individuals, as opposed to large-scale official ones) from Roman literature are explored in terms of materiality and agency. The chosen oath examples are all phrased using a ‘material language’ and their oath formulae include what is here termed as objectifying wordings, that is the reference to abstract things through material matter. The present article aims to demonstrate that Roman authors sometimes chose to (have their characters) swear by material matter – instead of something abstract and intangible – in order to better express what is actually sworn by or what is actually put up as deposit in the portrayed oath: in other words, how they could utilize contemporary notions of materiality as literary tools for the formulation of personal oaths.

Oath-taking 1 was a central part of ancient Roman society and culture.Oaths were sworn in many and varied instances of life: magistrates always swore upon entering and leaving an office, soldiers continually swore an oath of allegiance upon enrolling in the Roman army, jurors, witnesses, and claimants swore in court, treaties were ratified by oaths, but also personal matters could be settled and individuals' statements enforced by swearing. 2Graeco-Roman literature, epigraphy, and numismatics constitute quite a rich source material for oaths, about which research have been conducted within and across many fields of study: history, religious studies, law, philo sophy, and, of course, language and literature. 3Notwithstanding, the field lacks comprehensive studies specifically combining Roman oath-taking with materiality, despite the extensive interest in materiality within the study of Graeco-Roman religion/magic at large. 4 Ancient Roman oath-taking, however, indeed constitutes a telling example of how words and matter interplay and relate to one another. 5From both literary and material evidence, we realize that material things -objects, living beings, and surroundingsfrequently were used in various manners in junction with, as well as in, the uttered oath formula.For instance, in official oath rituals the oral formula is described in the literature as accompanied by bodily gestures that discernably symbolized, visualized, and further mater ialized the words spoken. 6In less official and more personal oaths that lacked such elaborate and ritualistic settings, matter could impact the oath and interplay with words in other ways: through language.The present study aims to examine one of these many ways, specifically how the relation between language and matter in material metonyms could be utilized to produce agency for the literary portrayal of personal oaths in Latin literature, mainly poetry.

Material Metonyms, Materiality, and Agency
In his study of the relations between nature and gesture in the Roman world, Anthony Corbeill remarks that "[a]n analysis of Latin words provides direct access to Roman conceptions of the body and its movements" and deduces that "[i]f language in the Roman world is an extension within nature, it should follow that human bodies, to the extent that natural language can affect them, also interact with the coherent patterning of the natural world."Among many examples provided, one is the importance of the "physical" word manus ("hand"), which acts as stem for the creation of many Latin words and expressions (mandare = "to entrust", lit."to hand over"; mancipatio, "the process of legal transfer of property", lit."the taking into the hand").The human body and its gestures frequently constitute a foundation for language, which Corbeill refers to as the "[p]hysicality of words". 7Latin words have a strong etymological connection to and -at least to an extent -originate from the physical world.
Another important interplay between matter and the Latin language is highly present in literary stylistic features generally employed in Latin literature, namely metonymic language-usages, for instance: concretum pro abstracto ("the concrete instead of the abstract") -and its opposite, abstractum pro concreto ("the abstract instead of the concrete") -and pars pro toto ("the part instead of the whole").Traditionally, metonyms have been viewed as a literary and rhetorical trope: a figure of speech.However, studies within cognitive linguistics argue that metonyms also are conceptual and constitute a figure of thought. 8Accordingly, a metonym is not merely a language embellishment, but also "a cognitive process in which one conceptual entity, the vehicle, provides mental access to another conceptual entity, the target, within the same idealized cognitive model." 9n line with this, the present study aims to reveal that the metonymical substitution of material language instead of abstract language -concretum pro abstracto and, when it comes to swearing by parts of the human body, pars pro toto -may impact the audience's understanding of an oath portrayed.In the cases presented here, the vehicles are all something material (concretum) that targets something abstract and/or a more comprehensive abstract institution such as the bodies walking in the processions, may produce a more context-specific agency.An oath constitutes a particular context, in which the relations between its entities -swearer, swearee (recipient of the oath), a guarantor power, and sometimes other material things -have the ability to create agency.For literary portrayals of oaths, there is also always another entity included that must be taken into account: the audience.
In the following sections, a selection of literary personal oaths is presented, through which I argue that the Roman authors communicate with the audience by choosing to let their characters metonymically swear by material things (the vehicles) utilizing concretum pro abstracto and pars pro toto.After proposing probable targets of the metonyms, I discuss possible impacts which they might have on the portrayal of the oath through the lens of materiality and agency.The selected examples are organized according to what is metonymically sworn by, namely: 1) bodies and objects, 2) places, 3) sacred objects and divine attributes, and 4) physical remains of the dead.

Bodies and Objects
In Heroides, the Roman poet Ovid (43 BCE-17 CE) portrays his version of the originally Greek story of the consorts Laodamia and Protesilaus.When Protesilaus had set out on the dangerous journey to fight in the Trojan war, Ovid portrays Laodamia as swearing to her devotion to him in absence: by your return and body, my divinities, I swear, and by the torches of love and marriage alike, that I as your companion shall follow you wherever you call, whether you shall … -oh, how I fear it!-or survive. 14 this oath, Ovid has chosen to have Laodamia swear by two material things, Protesilaus' "body" (corpus) and the "torches of our love and marriage alike" (pares animi coniugiique faces), that may act as vehicles for unlocking the target(s).
First of all, "body" is a very physical way of denoting a person.Here, in combination with "return" (reditus), body could also constitute a hendiadys meaning "bodily return", which well suits the context of the oath: Laodamia's desire for the bodily return of her beloved and her fear of their physical separation becoming eternal, were he to die in the war.Indeed, her fear of the eternal separation of their bodies is clear, since she abruptly breaks off her sentence (aposiopesis) and dares not even utter the words "if you should die" in her oath formula and have her own body, her voice, materialize her frightful thoughts and thus grant them agentive and illocutionary power.Moreover, this longing for Protesilaus' body is clearly manifested a few lines prior to her oath, where it is revealed that Laodamia keeps a wax image (cera) of Protesilaus, objectifying his body: Still, while you, a soldier, carry arms in a far-off world, I have a wax image, which brings back your appearance.To it I speak flatteries and words owed to you.It receives my embraces.Believe me, this image is more than it seems to be; add a voice to the wax, and it shall be Protesilaus.I look at it and hold it to my bosom in my true companion's stead, and I complain to it, just as if it could answer. 15 so explicitly referring to the bodily longing for Protesilaus, Ovid also foreshadows the end of the story, which his Roman audience pre-supposedly knew from the famous legend(s) of Protesilaus and the (extremely fragmentarily preserved) tragedy of Euripides, namely that his body would not return from Troy.Instead, he was granted to return from the Underworld for but one single day and then forced to return to the realm of the dead, after which Laodamia committed suicide to be reunited with him. 16Arguably, Ovid very likely chose "body" as vehicle, so that it might target both Laodamia's physical desire for his bodily return and the fact that she kept true to her oath: in the end, she did follow him wherever he called, even to the Netherworlds, where at least the shades of their bodies were reunited.
Secondly, there are the marriage torches, the so-called faces coni ugii, which refer to certain torches used on the wedding day of Roman marriages.Most probably, Ovid here included the attribute coniugii ("of marriage") to distinguish the marital torch from the funeral torch (fax sepulchralis), which was used to light funeral pyres. 17The marital torches were ignited at the parental hearth of the bride, carried in front of her by a young boy in the marital procession towards the house of the groom, where ceremonials and celebrations took place. 18In a way, the torches thus embodied the Roman marriage together with other objects used during the nuptial ritual; hence, there was a practice among Roman authors, "when they needed a shorthand method to refer to a wedding," to refer to it "metonymically with the mention of torches, the wedding veil, or even the wedding-bed or couch". 19Here, however, it is not used as a "shorthand method", but rather as a seemingly intentional one.The bride's procession, led by the torches for the whole community to observe, constituted a public declaration of the bride's consensus and affectio maritalis. 20Furthermore, according to Reekmans, the culmen of Roman marriage rituals (nuptiae) was the sacrifice and the dextrarum iunctio ("the joining of the right hands"), which in general was an act of consent, but in the context of consorts it is thought to have symbolized marital concord, whether or not the gesture was specifically performed during the actual wedding day. 21The close relation between the marital torches and the iunctio dextrarum, however, is visually evident in iconographic representations of married couples. 22rom the Roman jurist Scaevola (end of second cent.CE) we are made aware of another marriage procedure including fire, specified to constitute the "wedding celebrations" (id est nuptiae celebrantur) together with the "crossing over" (transiret) of the bride to the groom, and which entailed that the bride "was accepted with fire and water". 23What exactly the ritual of fire and water means remains unclear, 24 and of course we must remember that Scaevola and Ovid are separated in time, but it is not entirely impossible that the torches were used to light a nuptial fire for this peculiar ritual, just like sepulchral torches were used to light sepulchral pyres at Roman funerals.
Hence, the wedding procession and the joining of the right hands were bodily performances connected to the spouses' consent and public display of the promise of a faithful future marriage, as well as the ritual of fire and water connected to the ritual acceptance of the bride into the groom's house.All of these are probable and fitting targets of the vehicle used in Laodamia's metonymic oath, "the torches of marriage and love alike".Torch (fax) could also, due to its affordances -hot, burning, inflaming -target notions of love (animi, "heart", "love", as Ovid specifies) as well as desire, "flame of love/ desire", 25 which pairs well with the other vehicle used in the oath, Protesilaus' "body" and Laodamia's desire for it.
What difference does Ovid's objectifying phrasing of Laodamia's oath make, then?Why not just have Laodamia swear merely and directly by the abstractum (marriage, love, Protesilaus' life)?Because, the introduction of a material entity (concretum) into the oath context expands the network of connections available, which is a set-up for agency production.To clarify, by letting certain objects closely linked to a larger abstract institution figure, the author may utilize their ability to produce contextual agency in his literary portrayals.If put into a fitting context, the objects may communicate beyond the written word, evoke images, and excite feelings in the audience, who were presumably well acquainted with the common cultural symbolisms associated with certain objects in certain contexts, such as the torch in a nuptial context.The objectifying phrasing (concretum pro abstracto) of Laodamia's oath, seemingly evokes scenes particularly from her wedding day and her public consent to marital concord, and perhaps also Protesilaus' ritual acceptance of her as his bride, as well as her own strong physical desires for his body provided by Ovid's poem's literary context and the Greek legend of Protesilaus and Laodamia.It must of course be stressed that Laodamia and Protesilaus were Greek mythical heroes and that they, historically speaking, did not undergo a Roman marriage ceremony, but merely did so in the imagination of the Roman author, so-called "imagined weddings". 26evertheless, this very fact makes Ovid's choice of indicating Roman nuptial practices more telling, since it is then specifically directed at his Roman -not Greek -audience.

Places
Silius Italicus (26-101 CE), in his epic poem Punica, portrays the Roman consul Lucius Aemilius Paullus as swearing by specific places and invoking them as witnesses of his oath to his general Fabius prior to the battle at Cannae (fought in 216 BCE): As witnesses [of my oath] I invoke the Tarpeian rock, the temple of Jupiter -our kin through blood -and the fortification walls of my blessed fatherland that I now leave standing with its citadel: wherever the supreme safety [of my blessed fatherland] calls me, I swear that I shall go there, despising the perilousness.But if the army, deaf to me who exhorts them, shall fight, I shall by no means regard you any longer, sons, nor the dear house of Assaracus' lineage; and in no way shall a wounded Rome see [me,] Paullus, return like Varro. 27e Tarpeian rock was situated close to the Capitol in Rome and, according to Rome's first written statutes, perjurers were to be punished to death by being flung from it. 28The temple of Jupiter undoubtedly refers to the temple on the Capitoline hill to "Jupiter the Best and the Greatest", who was commonly invoked in oaths and in the vicinity of whose temple oaths were sworn. 29The walls surrounding the city naturally fortified it, but they were also powerful symbols of Rome in particular.Firstly, the term commonly used to denote the city of Rome alone, urbs, likely in origin means "something that is (ritually) enclosed" (from the Proto-Indo-European gherdh). 30The city of Rome was therefore equated with its city walls.Secondly, already the ubiquitous stories of the legendary foundation of Rome convey the notion that the Roman walls were inviolable: some even said that Rome's founder, Romulus, uttered a curse that all who transgressed his walls should face death, just like his brother Remus. 31lausibly, the mere mention of these places evoked vivid pictures of power, piety, and security in themselves: the tall and intimidating rock, which surely brought visions of the old horrifying punishment for perjury, the mighty and massive temple situated on top of the hill, and the towering and safety-infusing fortification walls.The rock and the temple were also places particularly connected to and important for official oath-taking.Additionally, the legendary curse and inviolability of the Roman walls is echoed in Paullus' oath: if forced to enter battle, he shall fight to his death to defend his patria. 32owever, also the current fragility of the once invincible Rome is evident in the oath phrasing.The author stresses that Paullus leaves the walls and the citadel "still standing" and that "a wounded Rome" herself shall never see him return.The city is portrayed as a living body with senses, as personified (personificatio/prosopopoeia).In effect, Paullus' own body and the "body" of the city are presented as stakes in his oath.The fear of losing these two different "bodies" is manifested by the author in the conclusion of this section of the story: "they simultaneously feared the end of the people and the city" (my emphasis). 33etonymically, these concreta may be vehicles conveying closely linked abstracta, characteristics, which embody the sum of what it entailed to be a good leader of the Roman Republic, according to the highly valued Roman virtue pietas (dutifulness towards gods, fatherland, and family) in "the Way of the Forefathers" (mos maiorum 34 ): he had to observe the safe-keeping of the state (the walls), show reverence for the gods (the temple), and comply with the body of laws (the Tarpeian rock).In essence, this is what Paullus promises to be: a good leader ready to die for the survival of Rome, in contrast to his co-consul Varro.
In conclusion, the choice of swearing by these three places has implications.First of all, they represent(ed) the Republican city of Rome, both in themselves as important, impressive monuments, and also in what these places arguably are conceptual metonyms for within this particular context: inviolable safe-keeping, piety, and justice.The cultural significance of these places, the relations the Romans had to them, and their own affordances (height, thickness, age) together produce agency for a nuanced portrayal of this oath.

Sacred Objects and Divine Attributes
Another use of concretum pro abstracto found in poetic portrayals of oaths is to swear by material attributes and belongings of divinities, instead of by the divinities themselves, which was otherwise the general norm.
For example, the poet Martial (38/41-102/104 CE) -excusing himself for the limited time and leisure available for praising the learned Muses in Rome -swears to his friend and patron Frontinus, not only in the common way "by all the gods" (per omnes iuro deos), but also "by the Muses' sacred [things], venerable to me" (per veneranda mihi Musarum sacra) that he still cares for him, despite his own inofficiousness. 35Sacra have an array of possible meanings in Latin: sacred or consecrated things, religious ritual/mysteries, sacred vessels, hymns and poems, and so forth. 36Here, two interpretations would fit well.Firstly, sacra may refer to poems, 37 as sacred to the Muses, who as guardians of poets inspired humans with artistic skills. 38Secondly, the sacra might also simply mean "sacred objects", which could refer to different vessels used in the service or worship of and sacrifices to deities. 39However, no such vessel fits the content of this oath.Instead, they might indicate the Muses' own sacred objects, that is their divine material attributes (such as musical instruments, theatre mask, scroll) representing their individual skill (such as music, dance, and different genres of poetry and theatre, history et cetera).These would then have been sacred both to the Muses and likely to Martial as a poet in their service. 40oth interpretations lead to a similar conclusion.By choosing to swear by the sacra of the Muses -that is, either the products of Muse-inspired poets (poems) or the attributes representing the different skills the Muses possessed and inspired artists with -Martial targets the conditional deposit of his oath, namely his own poetic skill and talent.Consequently, he portrays the validity of his oath as dependent upon himself highly valuing being a vates -"a (divinely inspired) poet" -as he refers to himself just prior to swearing. 41Had he sworn only by the Muses, his conditional self-curse would have entailed having the Muses exact some divine punishment upon him, in case of perjury.Now, he specifies that his punishment should be to become bereft of his poetic skills.
A more explicit example of a divine attribute sworn by is found in Ovid's (43 BCE-17 CE) Amores.In this passage, Ovid himself swears not only "by Venus" (per Venerem), but also "by the winged boy's bow" (puerique volatilis arcus), that he has not been unfaithful to his beloved, who repeatedly accuses him of being so. 42The winged boy refers to Cupid, god of libido, who with his bow shot arrows inflicting libidinous desire onto his targets.By explicitly mentioning the bow, a concretum, instead of Cupid as Libido personified (as he likely does with Venus as Love personified), it acts as a metonymic vehicle to more specifically target his own body.His body has not been shot by the bow and caused to unwillingly feel arousing lust towards other women: his body is free from guilt.Had he only sworn "by Venus and Cupid", the meaning would have been more in line with "by Love and Desire, I have not cheated on you", which focuses on his abstract feelings towards his beloved.The infidelity-causing bow, the divine attribute and the source of Cupid's divine ability, 43 conveys more in this context: not even unwillingly, bodily forced by divine intervention, has he been unfaithful to her.
Propertius (ca.50-45 BCE-ca.15 CE), in a poem from his Elegies, uses a similar way of rephrasing an oath sworn to himself by his departed beloved Cynthia, who in a dream ghostly appeared before him and spoke: Yet, I do not rebuke you, although you deserve it, Propertius: long-lasting was my in your works.I swear by the Fates' chant that nobody can unwind, that I have kept my word and good faith [fides]; [as sure as I have kept my word and good faith], so may the three-headed dog bark softly for me.If I speak falsely, may a snake hiss in my tomb and nest on top of my bones. 44e Fates were thought to determine the outcome of one's life.In Roman culture (as well as in many other Indo-European ones), life was often metaphorically imagined as a spinning thread (stamen) spun by three Fate-goddesses (Fata or Parcae), who cut the thread when time had come for the life to end. 45The chant of the Fates, referred to in this poem, was thought to be performed by the goddesses while spinning this thread of life. 46Since the Fates' chant is specifically described as something "that nobody can unwind/untwine/unravel" (revolubile nulli), the threads of Fate are explicitly implied.In extension, the oath itself echoes as something that cannot be unraveled, since an oath too was seen as something essentially binding. 47y having the ghost of Cynthia swear by the Fates' divine physical labor, Propertius stresses the determinism of Cynthia's death and portrays it as the surety of her oath.She is, after all, dead while swearing this and taking the Fate goddesses as witnesses, guarantors, and penalty executioners in case of perjury would therefore not entail a credible surety.However, swearing by "the Fates' chant that nobody can unwind" shifts the focus from the Fates as guarantors onto the fact that death is final and cannot be unwind, thus indicating an oath in line with "as sure as I am dead, I speak truthfully".Her being dead is certainly also why Cynthia's explicitly stated conditional self-curse is directed at her bones and grave, since even the dead fear for their reputation and commemoration among the living being tarnished.This brings us onto the next category: the remains of the dead.

Physical Remains of the Dead
Most often in poetry (but also in a few instances from legal/rhetorical prose and historiography) we find oaths sworn by material remnants of departed kinsfolk or loved ones, that is specifically by their bones, ashes, place of funeral and/or burial, and, in a certain legendary story, by their blood. 48Another common way of swearing by the dead was by one's kinfolks' spiritual, rather than material, remnants, by the Manes, "the spirits of the departed". 49In line with a dubious passage in Statius (ca.45-ca.96 CE), it is reasonable to assume that oaths by remnants of the dead (here "buried ashes") were sometimes specifically sworn in front of grave markers, more particularly funerary altars dedicated to the Manes: Now grief more and more vexes vigilant senses; the moans are clear and Polyxo is gradually detested.Now it is allowed to remember the impious act; now it is allowed to erect altars to the Manes and often swear by the buried ashes. 50nerary altars, dedicated to the Manes through the inscription D(is) M(anibus sacrum), were commonly erected from around the time of Augustus, roughly around the same time as most of the literary examples of oaths by remnants were written. 51On the one hand, to the best of my knowledge, no other remaining textual source particularly refers to such a practice. 52On the other hand, it is widely attested in literary sources that 1) oaths in general often were sworn in front of altars of gods and 2) that also funerary altars were considered sacred places. 53The remains were often kept inside or by the funerary altar, as evidenced by the innovation of the Augustan period of underlining in epitaphs that the remains were indeed physically buried there; for instance, "here lie the bones" (ossa hic sita sunt) and "may the bones/ remains rest in peace" (ossa/reliquiae bene quiescant). 54Hence, it is not unreasonable to think that one wished to be in the presence of "the buried ashes" (cineres sepultos) at the funerary altar while swearing by them.
Why swear by material remnants of dead kinsfolk, then?First of all, the ashes and bones of a dead person constitute a metonym of the type pars pro toto ("the part for the whole"): the bones/ashes (the part) indicate the entire person (the whole).The same goes for blood of a departed, if we consider Brutus' legendary oath following the suicide of Lucretia, as it is phrased by the historian Livy (59 BCE-17 CE): "I swear by this most chaste blood" (castissimum […] sanguinem iuro); and by the poet Ovid (43 BCE-17 CE): "I swear by this brave and chaste blood" (hunc iuro fortem castumque cruorem). 55Naturally, they mean that Lucretia, not her blood, was brave and chaste, specifically in her final actions in life.
For a literary audience, these particular "parts" (bones, ashes, blood) also conveniently convey that the person is dead, if not already aware of the fact.In contrast, alive persons in the literature swore in a similar pars pro toto-metonymic way: "by my head" (per caput) 56 -meaning their entire life and their value of it -and "by my right hand" (per dext(e)ram) 57 -meaning their credibility/good faith/ loyalty (fides), since the right hand was considered the seat of those qualities and was used to perform the "joining of the right hands" (iunctio dextrarum), a gesture manifesting contracts, consent, and concord. 58Since these metonymic vehicles (right hand, head) in the end target abstract institutions (life, good faith), they constitute metonyms of the sort concretum pro abstrato ("the concrete for the abstract") as well.
By the same token, it is not hard to imagine that the ashes, bones, and place of burial not only targeted the dead kin per se, but also embodied the emotional connection between the living and the departed kin.In an excellent article about humans figuring in oath invocations, Blidstein writes that all kinds of invocations of the dead (spirits, remnants) function due to "the strong connection of the swearer with the dead rather than their ability to punish [in case of perjury]." 59Servius Grammaticus, commenting on Vergil's (70-19 BCE) the Aeneid 2.431, where an oath is sworn "by the ashes of Ilium and the final flames of my kin", 60 clarifies this by noting that "it is natural to swear by that which is dear". 61In light of this, the connection one had to the person while alive and how that connection had been continually cherished and commemorated powered the oath with agency, and the choice of including the place of burial and/or physical remnants in the oath formula was a way of evoking and manifesting that connection in words.
Being physically present at the place of burial, like a funerary altar, must have enhanced that emotional connection to the dead.For the Romans, we know that funeral sites could be sought-out for swearing oaths, which is mentioned in a passage in Suetonius (ca.69-ca.122 CE).He tells us how "the common people" (plebs) persisted in visiting the commemorative marble column of Julius Caesar (100-44 BCE) that was erected at the site of his funeral pyres at the eastern end of the Roman Forum and inscribed with "To the Father of the Fatherland" (parenti patriae).They would come before it, he writes, to "sacrifice, make vows, and resolve certain controversies by putting forward an oath by Caesar". 62The place of the divinized father of the Roman people's funeral pyre was clearly not merely a site for commemoration, but also a place that enhanced the connection to the departed Caesar and powered the oaths sworn by him.
In addition to the emotional connections to one's kin, material remnants may also act as metonymic vehicles for more context-specific abstract targets.For instance, in the legendary scene in which Brutus holds up the dagger he pulled from the dead Lucretia's self-inflicted wound and swears by her blood that no king shall ever again rule in Rome, the blood constitutes a symbol for the Tarquinian prince's vile crime that forced Lucretia to commit suicide to retain her honor. 63lidstein writes: The knife and the blood are a metonym for Lucretia's actions and for the Tarquinian wrongdoing; Livy sets these actions as the common foundation for the future actions of Brutus's circle.In Livy's narrative, the oath invokes an honored action or entity, which is foundational for the group's identity and sense of being. 64ing in Lucretia's bedroom with her lifeless body and her blood dripping from the dagger before them -the crime scene -is here portrayed as what powers this oath with agency.Brutus' conjuration, that aimed to overthrow the Roman monarchy, needed a powerful symbol of the royal corruption to incite the people for revolution, and Lucretia's death appeared as the perfect candidate.Livy tells us how the swearers carried her bloodstained body to the forum of Collatia, where a crowd soon assembled and a rising against the royal family was stirred.Her spilt blood thus came to embody not only the crime committed towards her, but also the royals' crimes towards the people, who all had their complaints of the prince and were moved to raise their weapons by the sight of grief and Brutus' brave sternness. 65o conclude this section, a comment is in place about the fact that oaths by material remnants and spirits of the departed occur outside of poetry, and whether this allows us to suspect that such oaths were used in real life instances.Blidstein highlights the difficulty of determining to which extent oaths invoking the Manes were used in every-day life, since the instances from outside of "poetic, epic, and dramatic literature" are few and "marked as atypical". 66However, quite a few of the examples of invocations of Manes cited are arguably atypical due to other reasons, for instance that the spirit invoked was a dead dolphin or that the spirit of the dead in fact was not dead, but still alive. 67he instances outside of poetry of swearing by material remnants of the dead come from a juridical anecdote, told by three Roman authors and which, according to one of them, was "well-known" (nota enim fabula est). 68It concerns an oath in court, which the plaintiff challenged the defendant to swear "by your father's (and mother's) ashes (that lie unburied), (and by your father's memory)", depending on the different versions of the story. 69Blidstein interprets this oath as "highly unusual […], since the accuser was totally unprepared that the defendant accept his challenge", but that invoking ashes could have been "more common as a rhetorical move". 70Here it may also be inferred that such voluntary oaths (iusiurandum voluntarium) in court in general seemingly were utilized quite often, since oaths, according to the jurist Gaius, were "the greatest remedy for settling/ expediating litigations", yet we have rather few descriptions of such events taking place (and then sworn by other things). 71But, Seneca the Elder actually mentions swearing by parental ashes in another legal dispute in his Controversiae, then concerning a disinherited son, his biological father, and his uncle, who had previously adopted him. 72ince the two legal oaths by ashes preserved to us concern fathers and sons, it appears that these voluntary oath formulations were proposed or mentioned because they fit the legal case at hand.Therefore, it is possible to suspect that similar cases between relatives might have been sworn in this way.If we also account for Statius' conveyance that people could swear by "the buried ashes often/a lot (multum)", it is not too far-fetched to think that such practices also left the courtroom.
Moreover, here we ought to regard the quickly spreading Roman innovations of sacredly dedicating epitaphs to the Manes and specifically mentioning material remnants of the departed in the epitaph text, as aforementioned.These innovations were contemporary with the authors and poets cited and could inferably shed a different light upon the oath invocations of spirits and remnants.Since they were so commonly included in epitaphs, not seldomly employed in poetic oaths, and occur a few times in other genres (although in peculiar contexts), there are many reasons to suggest that invoking bones, ashes, and spirits of the dead in oaths were part of real life for the 1 st century Roman.Indeed, all literary conventions -even embellished poetic ones -reasonably reflect cultural practices in one way or another.Otherwise, literature would make no sense to its con tem po rary audience.

Conclusions
The foundational argument in this article is that matter employed as metonyms for the abstract in an oath phrasing has the ability to evoke specific aspects (emphasis on the plural!) within the targeted abstract as well as excite feelings and images due to the matter's own affordances.As such, the matter constituting the metonym is not merely a direct substitution for the abstract, but also a thing in its own right that affects the audience in further ways than had only the abstract been sworn by.Certain objects are also imbued with specific cultural significances in certain contexts, such as a torch in a marriage context as opposed to a sepulchral context.Hence, the matter, the concreta, utilized in some of the metonymic oaths provided are culturally closely related to the targeted abstract and were, as argued, employed in order to both convey a specific abstract notion and evoke further thoughts, feelings, and images.For instance, the torch was linked to marriage through cultural wedding practices and to feelings of love and desire through natural affordances of fire.As a consequence, the audience is often allowed a deeper glimpse into the meaning of the oath, namely what the swearer is presented as putting up as deposit and surety in his/her oath to make it credible.As hopefully demonstrated, the materials specifically sworn by in these oaths are thus better understood as conceptual metonyms and figures of thought rather than merely as traditional metonyms as figures of speech, where x stands for y.Due to the forces of materiality, matter used as metonymic vehicles has the ability to evoke more than only one target.
In conclusion, because the introduction of a material entity into the literary oath context clearly expands the network of relations, which leads to further associations within that context, as well as the fact that objects could have imbued cultural meanings, I here argue that material metonyms are very useful literary tools that reach beyond poetic embellishment.They have the ability to steer the audience's interpretation of the oath portrayed and, within the literary oath context, produce agency and thus increase the power and efficacy of the oath.
This article constitutes but one of the many possible perspectives on the relations between Roman oaths and materiality, between meta phors and matter, as well as between Roman literature and material culture at large.Lots remain to be investigated within these fields, and hopefully this study might evoke further thoughts and inspire further research.24 It might be that the right to utilize fire and water signified the possibility to live in a certain place, if contrasting the practice with the punishment of exile referred to as "fire and water" (ignis et aqua), which entailed that the exiled person was shut off from utilizing fire and water in the city (that is, denied to exist there).However, this does not tell us how the nuptial practice to accept the bride with fire and water was performed, but it might give a suggestion as to why. 25 e.g.Hor.Carm.3.9.13;Cic.Tusc.