CHAPTER TWELVE
NAILS FOR THE DEAD: A POLYSEMIC ACCOUNT OF AN
ANCIENT FUNERARY PRACTICE1
Silvia Alfayé Villa
1. Introduction: Nails in Funerary Contexts
Italian scholars have recently re-opened an old debate about the function of nails discovered in Greek and Roman cremation and inhumation tombs.2 Although some are undoubtedly utilitarian, the widespread
presence, in the Greek world as well as in the Roman Empire, of single
nails in graves, especially cremation graves, suggests they were deliberately buried with the grave-goods. Ever since the nineteenth century scholars have generally interpreted isolated nails of this sort as
apotropaic, as talismans to protect the dead person from the dangers
of the Aterlife. he alternative view has been that the dead were to
be symbolically conined to the grave in order to prevent them from
becoming revenants. here has however as yet been no synthetic study
of the main problems connected with the intentional deposit of nails
in defunctive contexts in the Graeco-Roman world. he purpose of
this paper is to ofer a summary survey of the archaeological material,
mainly in the western part of the Roman Empire, followed by evaluation of the discussion it has evoked.
1
I would like to thank Francisco Marco and Richard Gordon for their suggestions
and comments which have much improved this article. My research has been conducted as part of the project “Espacios de magia, superstición y poder en el Occidente
del Imperio Romano”, inanced by DGICYT (HUM 241–29). Note that where it is
necessary to distinguish types of graves, inc. = incineration; inh. = inhumation. I have
retained the ancient place names in referring to cemeteries where that practice was
followed in the excavation-report.
2
See the papers in Heinzelmann 2001; Maioli 2007, 108.
428
silvia alfayé villa
2. Nails, Coins and Grave-goods
Some nails found inside graves were purely utilitarian: they are carpenter’s nails, used for joining timber, either of the coin or of the bier
used to transport the corpse to the pyre.3 A wide variety of ancient cofins is attested; in most cases iron nails were used in their construction,
but sometimes they were jointed and/or dowelled. Occasionally they
were even carved in one piece from a tree-trunk.4 Where the wood
itself is not preserved, the existence of a coin is inferred from the distribution-pattern of the nails around the corpse and/or from changes
in the colouring of the earth which reveal the dimensions of the coin.
Examples of this are known from the necropolis at Olynthus, and from
the Roman cemeteries of London, Lankhills (Winchester) or SainteBarbe (Strasbourg).5
Another explanation for nails in funerary contexts is that they had
been used in the manufacture of objects originally deposited as gravegoods but now decayed and disappeared. A case in point are the hobnails used in leather shoes or boots that have been found in graves in
Lutetia Parisiorum, London or Lankhills.6
However, it is hard to discern a utilitarian purpose for single nails
found in a tomb, nails that have never been used, or whose tip has
been deliberately twisted—thus calling attention to their non-utilitarian signiicance—or that are “too large to have come from a coin”.7
Nevertheless, this last claim must be allowed to be impressionistic: as
3
Cf. for example Angelucci et al. 1990, 84f., igs. 33f.; Hachlili and Killebrew 1999,
60–90; Watson 2003, 16; 33f.; 60–63.
4
Cf. Salin 1952, 95f.; 125f., 369f., igs. 47f.; Clarke 1979, 332–41; Barber and Bowsher 2000, 93–95; Watson 2003, 62f.; Blaizot et al. 2004, 92–108, ig. 6.
5
Olynthus (VI–IVa): Robinson 1942, 159f. Roman cemeteries in London (Ip–Vp):
Watson 2003, 16f.; 44f.; Barber and Bowsher 2000, 91–98, igs. 63–66, 71f.; 108–109;
112. Lankhills (IIIp–Vp): Clarke 1979, 332–41; 353–55. Sainte-Barbe (IVp–VIIp): Blaizot
et al. 2004, 92–96, ig. 6.
6
Lutetia: Petit 1984, 349, ig. 223; Caerleon: Evans and Maynard 1997, 237–39; London: Barber and Bowsher 2000, 137f.; 354, ig. 99, Table 132; Lankhills: Clarke 1979,
178–181; 322–25; 370f.; 406–8. Since a pair of military boots contained around 300
hobnails, it is clear that in all these cases most of the nails must have been retrieved,
perhaps for re-use; for other explanations, cf. Simmonds, Márquez-Grant and Loe
2008, 25–6, 115–6, 135.
7
Cf. Paris et al. 1926, 88 (from tombs at Baelo Claudia); Kurtz and Boardman
1971, 216 (on the 10–15cm nails from the necropolis at Olynthus); Castella 1987, 32
(the large nails in the graves of Port d’Avenches); Hachlili and Killebrew 1999, 169
(necropolis of Jericho); Maioli 2007, 108 (twisted nails from Italian necropolis). See a
discussion on this topic in Chausserie-Lapree and Nin 1987, 80–1.
nails for the dead
429
Clarke points out, the number of nails used in the construction of cofins varied widely from one or two to more than ity, and their size
was very variable. hus, for example, some of the nails used in the cofins of the late-Roman cemetery of Lankhills are 15–20 cm long.8 he
existence of these and other oddities, such as the presence of nails in
cremation-tombs, and the discovery in some graves of imitation nails
made of silver or glass—useless from a practical point of view—have
led researchers to suggest other possible values of nails in defunctive
contexts beyond the merely utilitarian.9
Nails found in cinerary urns might theoretically derive from the
burning of the coin, the bier and/or the grave goods on the pyre,
so that their presence in the urn along with the ashes of the deceased
would be unintended and thus irrelevant for our purpose.10 his explanation is plausible in the case of small nails, which might have gone
unnoticed by those who collected the ashes and deposited them in
their inal resting-place; but it is less likely that a 10–15cm long nail
would have gone undetected, particularly if we take into consideration
the fact that sometimes the nail is actually taller than the funerary
urn (Text-ig. 11).11 But the strongest argument in favour of deliberate
inclusion is that, as Bruzza irst pointed out well over a century ago,
the nail is linked both in cremations and inhumations to a recurrent
8
Clarke 1979, 337; 354; tables 35–37 on p. 332 indicate that most of the coin
nails found at Lankhills measured 4–11 cm, while the longest were 22 cm long. Such
dimensions are by no means exceptional: most of the nails used in the coins from
the western cemetery of London are 4–10cm long, but some are up to 14cm long; cf.
Barber and Bowsher 2000, 94; cf. also Martorelli 2000, 43 (large nails at Cornus).
9
Gaidoz (in Jullian et al. 1902, 300) noted the discovery of long silver nails in
graves from Greece, Italy and France (without specifying the cemeteries in question),
and considered them to be ‘magical’; also Martorelli 2000, 43, on glass nails in funerary contexts from Piamonte.
10
his is the explanation ofered by Almagro 1955, 100, and Vollmer and López
1995, 130–1, 137 n.17–20, for the numerous nails found in the cremations at Ampurias. Others have proposed similar arguments for the incineration burials they were
dealing with: Uglietti 1985, 561f.; Evans and Maynard 1997, 190; 239 (many small
wood-nails; prior cremation in coins in 68 of 121 burials); Barber and Bowsher 2000,
60f.; 104–106; Falzone, Olivanti and Pellegrino 2001, 133f.; Chapon et al. 2004, 133f.
In other cases, as pointed out by Ratel 1977, 83, Mondanel and Mondanel 1988, 29,
and Simmonds, Márquez-Grant and Loe 2008, 115, the nails might have come from
the wooden casket in which the cinerary urn was placed (Evans and Maynard 1997,
239 report numerous small tacks less than 25mm in length).
11
As pointed out by Black 1986, 222f.; also Mondanel and Mondanel 1988, 98. See
also several examples in Allain et al. 1992, 52f.; 128, tomb 74; Buchner and Ridgway
1993, pl. XCIII (grave 70), pl. XCV (grave 76), pl. CXI (grave 109); Ceci 2001, 89, igs.
4–5; Vegas 1988, taf. 34 and 79a (grave 66), and taf. 58 and 61 (grave 96).
430
silvia alfayé villa
Fig. 11. Funerary goods: pottery vessel, two nails, two coins and a lamp.
Grave 110, Pithekoussai (Roman cemetery). Drawing by J. Rodríguez Corral,
adapted from Buchner and Ridgway 1993, pl. CXI.
set of grave-goods.12 We thus ind a typical set of grave goods in a
whole range of cemeteries, mostly dating II–IIIp, consisting of nail(s),
a lamp, a small ceramic vessel and/or an unguent-jar and, quite oten,
a coin (Text-igs. 11–12). he idea that funerary-goods were consciously selected, with variations due to fashion and/or local tradition,
is supported by a number of studies, mainly based on early-imperial
Italian and Gallo-Roman cemeteries (Table 2, p. 433).13 We also ind
regularities in the positioning of the objects: in the majority of documented cremation-graves, for example, either the lamp and the nail
are deposited inside the cinerary urn, or the nail is deliberately placed
inside the olletta or the lamp. In the case of inhumation-graves, the
ceramic vessel containing the nail and the lamp is usually found at
the foot of the skeleton, as at Pithekoussai or Picentia (Table 2). here
are however some interesting variations. he skeleton in inhumationtomb Bonjoan 7 at Ampurias, for example, dating from IV–IIIª, was
found holding an unguent-jar and an iron nail in its let hand. An
almost exact parallel is known from inhumation grave Martí 75, also
at Ampurias, and from grave 5 of the Greek necropolis at Camarina,
dating from mid-IVª, where the skeleton held a coin and a nail likewise in the let hand.14 his last ind also tends to corroborate Jorio’s
Bruzza 1874, li–iii.
I have myself checked the inventories of grave-goods from several cemeteries,
such as those at Pithekoussai and Ampurias. Other examples are: Ghirardini 1888,
320; Mondanel and Mondanel 1988, 98; Lagi de Caro 1995, 347f.; Quilici and Quilici
1998, 210; Ceci 2001, 89f.; 94; Falzone, Olivanti and Pellegrino 2001, 131 n. 10.
14
Inh. Bonjoan 7: Almagro 1953, 146; 155 ig. 121; Martí 75: Almagro 1953, 80
pl. 52: a 7.5cm long iron nail and an unguent-jar held in the let hand of an infant;
Camarina: Orsi 1899, 256f.
12
13
nails for the dead
431
Fig. 12. he grave-goods from incineration tomb 7, Via Nomentana, Rome:
pottery vessel, two nails, coin and lamp (Ip). Drawing by J. Rodríguez Corral,
adapted from Ceci 2001, 92, ig. 5.
thesis, formulated as early as the beginning of the nineteenth century,
that coins and nails oten co-occur in such contexts (Text-igs. 11–12).
Recent studies suggest that this association is not accidental but part
of an entire ritual complex (Table 2).15
15
Cf. Jorio 1824, 128f; Spano 1859, 123. Coin and nail are paired in a funerary
context at Pezzino (tomb 551); Pontecagnano (graves 6244, 6268, 6288, 6319, 6320,
6419, 6501, 6648); Cornus (graves 82, 85); Pithekoussai (graves 2, 14, 15, 29, 49, 60,
432
silvia alfayé villa
Taking all these data into account, it can hardly be doubted that
there are indeed many cases in which the presence of one or more nails
cannot be explained away in utilitarian terms. he obvious alternative
is that such deposits are evidence of a ritual practice linked to a belief
in the symbolic and social signiicance of nails.16 Archaeologists have
ofered two hypotheses, which are not necessarily mutually exclusive,
though they are oten treated as such: the nails were either apotropaic
amulets, intended to protect the deceased from evil in the Aterlife, or
they were protective/defensive, to prevent the dead from returning to
disturb or harm the living. Each can be supported by anthropological
parallels from all over the world (e.g. Frazer 1933–36/2003) and by the
magical value attributed to nails in antiquity. In this paper, I conine
myself to the latter.
3. Usus clavorum in arte magica valde lorebat17
Before discussing the two hypotheses in greater detail, I should make
some preliminary remarks so as to clear the ground. Nails are found in
a number of magical contexts in antiquity. One reason for this is that
their shape and function make them an ideal basis for metonymic and
metaphorical evocation: deictic magical action complements the performativity of magical utterance. Nails are ‘good to think’. Moreover,
the mere act of driving nails into a material surface can be evoked in
many diferent ways. Literary sources attest to the fact that they were
considered a means of defence against malign powers and la maledetta.18 Diseases could be ‘nailed’ and so deictically neutralised; examples are ceremony of the clavus annalis, which was originally linked
to public calamity (Livy 7.3.3–8); and a cure for epilepsy recorded by
81, 125); Cabasse (tomb 6, 13, 20); Blicquy (tomb 21, 75, 79, 242, 306); Baelo Claudia
(grave 820); Colonia Patricia Corduba (grave 5); Ampurias (inc. Las Corts 24; inc.
Ballesta 15, 17, 18; inh. Ballesta 2, 8; inc. Rubert 24, 29; inc. Torres 5, 13–14, 18, 53,
64, 68; inc. Patel 5; inc. Sabadí 5; inc. Bonjoan XIV; inh. Bonjoan III); Fralana (tombs
21, 22); Tavant (tomb 6); Marcillat-La Faye; Lezoux III (grave 87); Sucidava; Gratte
Dos (tomb 4); Chantambre; Mulva (graves 31, 63); Isola Sacra (tombs 22, 32) and in
several necropoleis on the outskirts of Rome.
16
As Morris 1992, 108, points out “grave goods are part of the total burial assemblage; taken away from it, they mean nothing. What we ind is determined by the
actors in ancient rituals, who put objects into graves because it seemed like a good
idea at the time”.
17
Heim 1892, 541.
18
E.g. Pliny, HN 10.152; 28.48; Columella, De re rustica 8.5.12.
Table 2. Published cemeteries with defunctive nails.
Necropolis
Pezzino,
Agrigento
Pithekoussai,
Ischia
Grave
551
Grave-Goods.
Va
Vª–IIp
Bibliographical references
De Miro 1989, 59–61, pl. XLVIII;
Cutroni 1995, 193, n. 7
Buchner and Ridgway 1993, 37, 38,
44–5, 47–8, 60–1, 81–2, 85–7, 90, 94,
123–6
Vª–IIIp
(mainly
I–IIp)
Almagro 1953 and 1955; Vollmer and
López 1995, 130–1, 137 n. 17–20.
IVa
IIIa–IIp
Orsi 1899, 256
Ceci 2001, 89, 92, igs. 4–5.
nails for the dead
Nail, coin, lekythoi,
amphorae, strigil, etc.
1, 2, 14, 18, 34, 35, 60, 69, 70, 76, 81, 104, Lamp, unguentary, nail
105, 109
and coin usually inside
olletta, placed at the feet of
the skeleton
Emporion,
Inhumation Martí 100; Inc. Martí 9; Inh. Nail(s), coin,
Ampurias,
Bonjoan 7, 12, 36, 47; Inc. Las Corts 7,
unguentarium, thin-walled
Gerona
17, 20, 24, 40, 46, 68, 78, 87, 97, 102,
vessel etc.
113–114, 119, 121, 123, 125, 131, 142,
153. Inc. Ballesta 3, 4, 7, 15, 17–18, 22,
23, 32, 38, 46, 48, 54; Inh. Ballesta 2, 8;
Inc. Rubert 1, 4, 13, 15–16, 22, 24–25,
27, 29–30, 39–40; Inh. Rubert 3; Inc.
Torres 5, 8, 11,13–15, 18, 20, 23, 27–28,
30–31, 39, 42, 44, 50–51, 53, 60–61, 63,
64, 67–68; Inc. Nofre 8; Inc. Patel 4–7, 9,
11–12, 18, 29, 22; Inc. Sabadí 5–6, 8–9,
20; Inc. Aniteatro 1, 2; Inc. Bonjoan III,
VI–VIII, X, XII–XIV, XVII–XVIII, XXI;
Inh. Bonjoan III; Inc. Granada II,VI; Inc.
muralla NW 1, 2, 4–5, 9, 13.
Camarina, Sicily 5
1 nail, 2 coins
Via Nomentana 7
Lamp+nail in thin-walled
1119, Rome
olletta, with nail+coin at
bottom
Date
433
434
Table 2 (cont.)
Necropolis
Grave
No details
Calle del Quart,
Valencia
Palestine
No details
Tipasa, Algeria
No details
Via Flaminia,
Rimini
56 (inc.)
No details
Via Nomentana 1; 7
km. 10.5, Rome
Via Laurentina, 48, 49
Ostia
D’Alleans, Baugy No details
La Côte
d’Orgeval,
Sommesous,
Marne
Via Camerini,
Rome
Via G. Antamoro,
Rome
Corinth
Infant inhumation St. 41, 302
7
Date
Bibliographical references
Lamp, vessel,
Late Repub. Bruzza 1874, LI–LIII
unguentarium, nails inside
cremation urns
“Nails as magical graveLate Repub. García Prósper and Guerin 2002,
goods”
210–1
Nail with magical function Hellenistic Hachlili and Killebrew 1999, 139–140,
Period
169; Hachlili 2005, 494, 511–6.
Baradez 1959, 217–8
Large bronze/iron nails in Ia–IIp
graves, used as phylacteries
1 twisted bronze nail
Ip
Ortalli 2001, 236–7, ig. 21; Maioli
placed under the ashes, at
2007, 108, 215, ig. 117.
the bottom of the grave; 1
iron nail
Nail, and coin; coin and
Ip
Ceci 2001, 92
nail inside vessel
Large nail inside cinerary Ip
Squarciapiano 1958, 104, 107, n. 73.
urn
Iron nails inside graves
Ip
Fontvielle 1987, 130.
without link to wooden
structures
1 nail, ceramic fragments Ip
Guillier 1992, 19, 27, ig. 7.
I–IIp
Ceci 2001, 94
1, 2
1 nail, 2 coins, mirror,
glass . . .
Nail and coin
I–IIp
Ceci 2001, 95
No details
Nail
I–IIp
Hoskins 2005, 277, n. 46.
silvia alfayé villa
Vercelli
Grave-Goods
Table 2 (cont.)
Necropolis
Grave
Date
Bibliographical references
I–II
Allain 1972, 26, igs. 3–4 ; Allain et al.
1992, 128–9
I–IIp
Castella 1987, 32, 62, 113, nº 379.
I–IIp
Riquier and Salé 2006, 27–9, 47–52,
71–2; igs. 23–4, 52–60.
I–IIp
Laet et al. 1972, 30, 83–9, 92, 96–7,
99–100, 104–5, 115, 118–124, 126–7,
131–4
p
nails for the dead
Bizarre disposition of the
nails with “une function
rituelle de nature magique”,
diverse objects . . .
Port d’Avenches 10
1 nail (15cm.) from a ship,
ring, ceramic fragments,
glass
Tavant, Indre-et- Infant inhumation 6, 15, 16
Nails intentionally placed
Loire
inside the sarcophagi at
the legs, feet or head of
the skeletons, small nails
possibly linked to wooden
objects, coin, ceramic
and glass vessels, jewels,
miniaturized dagger,
objects made of bone . . .
Blicquy, Leuze- 19, 21, 23B, 26, 33, 43, 48, 50, 75, 79, 106, 1–4 large nails inside the
en-Hainaut
121,134, 142, 163, 167, 170,242, 243, 268, cinerary urn (mixed up
278, 282, 293, 295, 303, 306, 315, 321,
with the human bones), or
338/340/341, 344, 381, 384, 392, 404,
with a bizarre disposition
405
of the grave-goods
Argentomagus,
Saint-Marcel
Only masculine graves; for example 54,
69, 95, 105, 130 etc.
Grave-Goods
435
Necropolis
Lezoux III,
Auvergne
436
Table 2 (cont.)
Grave
Cremation 98, 102, 121, 141; 12; 87
Grave-Goods
Bibliographical references
I–II
Mondanel and Mondanel 1988, 98
I–IIp
Chevillot and Moissat 1980, 207–14,
221–2, 227–9, 233–4, igs. 2, 4, 7–9,
16.3–4.
I–IIp
Raddatz 1973, 37–8, 52–6, 59–66, abb.
12–15, 19–20, 22–3, taf. 8–9, 14–20;
Vegas 1988, 57, 76–80, 85–6, 92–3, taf.
13, 17, 23, 32–4, 57–8, 79, 81.
I–IIp
Nierhaus 1959, 48–9, 70–1, 73, 75–6,
81–2, taf. 6.B, F; 9.C-D, F; 11, abb. 4;
12, abb. 4 , 6.
I–IIIp
Loridant 1992, 98.
I–IIIp
Bérard 1961, 110–1, 115,123, 133–5.
silvia alfayé villa
1 nail mixed up with
human bones inside
cinerary urn; odd
distribution of nails; 3
nails, cinerary urn, 2
vessels, 1 coin
Les Grandes
Inc.
2 hollow iron nails without
Terres, Neuvic
the tips, 5 pottery vessels
(one pierced by a nail), 2
iron rings, stone slab
Mulva, Munigua, Inc. 9, 10, 13, 15; Southern Cemetery 24, Nails placed inside
31, 41, 63, 66, 96
cremation graves with a
Seville
magical intention, jewels,
pottery vessels, lamp,
unguentarium, coin, glass
vessels . . .
Bad Cannstatt,
8, 10, 19, 34, 36, 38, 41, 64, 67, 69, 71
1 or 2 nails placed inside
Stuttgart
“poor graves” with a
magical intention, lamp,
pottery vessels, . . .
Fache des Près
No details (10 cremations) + 2 uncertain Only one nail in each
Aulnoys, Bavay graves (291, 396) + inhumation 546
grave, grave-goods (no
detailed).
La Calade,
3, 6, 13, 19, 20, 40
Nail tips, coin, lamp,
Cabasse, Var
unguentarium; bizarre
layout of nails
Date
p
Table 2 (cont.)
Necropolis
Grave
820; 811; infant inhumations
(grave-numbers not given)
Colonia Patricia
Corduba,
Cordoba
Northern Gallia
(Lutecia, BunoBonnevaux,
Armorica . . .)
5
No details
Fralana, Ailia
XX, XXII
Via U.Fracchia,
Rome
40; 45; 108
Isola Sacra, Ostia 22, 32 (saggio 16)
Linton, Cambs.
5
Date
3 nails, coin, mirror, ring, I–III
etc.; 2 vessels, jewels, 2
lamps and a nail placed
at the feet of the skeleton;
nails placed at the feet and
head of the corpse, jewels,
lamps, etc.
Nails and coins
I–IIIp
p
Paris et al., 1926, 74–5; 83, 89; 87
Moreno 2006, 250.
I–IVp
Doorselaer 1967, 122; Chevillot and
Moissat 1980, 227–9; Bourgeois 1984,
294; Petit 1984, 248; Galliou and Jones
1991, 113–4.
IIp
IIp
Falzone, Olivani and Pellegrino 2001,
131–3, 135–6
Ceci 2001, 89, 94
IIp
Angelucci et al. 1990, 75
IIp
Lethbridge 1935–1936, 70–71
437
Nail inside or around
graves (“with magical
intention”); large iron nails
at the feet, jaw or chest of
the skeletons
Coin and nail inside thinwalls-vessel
Nail, coin, lamp, thinwalled olletta; 2 nails, coin;
3 nails, coin
Coin, unguentarium and
nail at the feet and nail at
the head of the skeleton;
olletta with nail and coin
inside
1 nail, vessels, jewellery,
glass bottle
Bibliographical references
nails for the dead
Baelo Claudia,
Bolonia, Cadiz
Grave-Goods
438
Table 2 (cont.)
Necropolis
Gratte Dos,
Meuilley
Grave
Cremation 4; 37
Grave-Goods
Bibliographical references
II
Ratel 1977, 77–8, 95, pl. IX
IIp
Autexier 1976, 75–81.
II–IIIp
Autexier et al. 1978, 64.
II–IIIp
Lagi de Caro 1995, 347–348
IIIp
Delattre and Magnan 1998, 147
III–IVp
González 2001, 360.
silvia alfayé villa
Nail and coin inside urn;
2 “clous votifs”, 10 nails
from a bier, 2 vessels, coin
Marcillat-La Faye, Inc.
44 nails (most of them
Mars, Creuse
twisted) of a “caractère
rituel”, coin, granite
cinerary urn, ceramic
vessels, lamps, glass
fragments
Louroux, Creuse A, D, J, pit F
Nails with bizarre (ritual?)
location
Picentia,
14 graves; detailed 6244, 6266, 6268,
Twisted/broken nails and
Pontecagnano
6278, 6288, 6319, 6320, 6419, 6448, 6501 a coin inside a thin-walled
vessel
Les Sablons,
Inhumations, no details
Large iron nails at the
Fresnes-surhead, stomach or knees of
Marne
the skeletons
El Albir, Valencia 6
2 large nails thrust into the
earth under the bottom of
the tomb
Date
p
nails for the dead
439
Table 3. Infant tombs with defunctive nails.
Necropolis
Grave
Grave-goods
Pithekoussai, Ischia 1, 2, 15 (twisted olletta, lamp,
hook, not a
unguentarium,
nail), 18, 34, 81 coins, nail (most
of them inside
the lamp or vessel
placed at the feet of
the skeleton)
Emporion,
Inhumation
Unguentarium held
Gerona
Martí 75; 100;
in infant’s l. hand +
134
nail; idem; 14
fragments of nails,
cardium shell, 2
lekythoi (one held
in infant’s l. hand),
small pottery cup,
2 fragments of
cuttleish-bone
Via Nomentana km 1; 7
Nail and coin;
10.5, Rome
nail and coin inside
a pottery vessel
La Côte d’Orgeval, Inhumation St. 1 nail without
Sommesous, Marne 41, 302
link to wooden
structure, ceramic
fragments
Argentomagus,
Cremation
Bizarre layout of
Saint-Marcel-Indre 55,74, 78, 121; nails, cinerary
Inhumation 70, urn, fragments of
77, 88, 122, 144 pottery . . .
Tavant,
Indre-et-Loire
Inhumation 6;
15; 16
Date
Bibliography
V -Roman
Buchner and
Ridgway 1993,
37, 38, 46, 47–48,
60, 94
V–IIIa
Almagro 1953, 80
(ig. 52); 94
(ig. 71); 111–2
(ig. 111).
Ip
Ceci 2001, 92
Ip
Guillier 1992, 19,
27, ig. 7.
I–IIp
Allain et al. 1992,
43, 52–3, 55, 76,
86, 92–4, 97, 128;
Laubenheimer
2004, 302
Riquier and Salé
2006, 27–9,
47–52, 72, 99, 103;
igs. 23–4, 52–60.
a
2 nails placed at
I–IIp
legs of skeleton,
4 small nails
at bottom of
the sarcophagi
(possibly linked
to a wooden
bier/box), coin,
ceramic vessels,
miniaturized
dagger; 1 fragment
of nail placed at
feet of skeleton,
sarcophagi, ceramic
and glass vessels,
jewels, objects
made
440
silvia alfayé villa
Table 3 (cont.)
Necropolis
Grave
Linton,
5
Cambridgeshire
La Calade, Cabasse, 40
Var
Chantambre,
l’Essonne
Baelo Claudia,
Bolonia
No details
No details
Sucidava, Dacia
No details
Poggio
Gramignano,
Lugnano in
Teverina
IB 14 (possible
burial)
Grave-goods
of bone; 1 nail
placed at head of
skeleton, 1 nail
placed outside
sarcophagi,
4 small nails
possibly related to
a wooden object,
ceramic & glass
vessels, pearls,
animal bones
Nail, jewels, vessels,
glass bottle
Groups of four
nails placed around
three olpai, plus
lamp and the skull
of infant; some of
the nails bent or
deliberately thrust
into earth; ceramic
vessels pierced by
nails
coin, nail, carved
stone, . . .
Nails placed at
head and feet of
skeleton, jewels
Hecatiform vessel,
2 coins, pottery
decorated with
Dionysiac igure,
1 nail at feet of
skeleton
Iron nail, animal
bones, iron nail
placed above outer
amphorae
Date
IIp
II–IIIp
II–IIIp
IIIp
Bibliography
Lethbridge
1935–1936, 70–1
Bérard 1963,
297–306
Laubenheimer
2004, 303
Paris et al. 1926,
87
IVp
Hampartumian
1978, 472–7, pl.
XCI
Vp
Soren and Soren
1999, 499, 511
nails for the dead
441
Pliny: clavum ferreum deigere in quo loco primum caput ixerit corruens morbo comitiali absolutorium eius mali dicitur, “It is said that driving an iron nail into the spot where the epileptic patient’s head irst
touches the ground [during a seizure] is a cure for that disease”.19 In
these cases, the intention is to protect the community or client/patient;
the aggression implied by the act of hammering is directed against
harmful spirits or disease. On the other hand, as everyone knows, nails
were used in an analogous fashion in malign magical curses for a quite
diferent purpose, being driven through already-inscribed and rolled
or folded tabellae deixionum. Here the implicit aggression is directed
against the human target; the aim is to ‘ix’ a malign-magical curse.
Piercing poppets with pins was another way of achieving the same
efect.20
To the expressive values of shape and action we may add material composition (mainly iron but also bronze).21 In the ancient world
special properties, both medicinal (e.g. Pliny, HN 34.151) and amuletic, were attributed to both these metals.22 Moreover the eicacy of
the metal could be enhanced by taking the metal’s provenance into
account: iron linked with the dead, especially the blood of the criminal dead, was believed to possess special potency, which made objects
made of it, e.g. rings, particularly valuable to practitioners of (malign)
magic like Pamphile (Apuleius, Met. 3.17: carnosi clavi pendentium) or
the super-witch Erictho (Lucan, Bell.civ. 6.544–46).23 hat the practice
of extracting nails from tombs for such purposes was widespread in
the Roman world is suggested by a funerary curse from near the Porta
Latina in Rome intended to deter possible thieves: Quiqumque hinc
19
HN 28.63. On the ceremony of the clavus annalis see Foresti 1979; Dungworth
1998, 153.
20
On the use of nails in deixiones and poppets, cf. Preisendanz 1972; Faraone 1991;
1992, 74–93; Gager, CT 14–18; Graf 1997, 134–37; Dungworth 1998, 153–57; Ogden
1999, 14, 73–79; and 2002, 245–60.
21
I here disregard the examples made of silver and glass.
22
See Marshall 1904, 333; Massoneau 1934, 115f.; Tupet 1976, 35–44; Veltri 1998,
74f.; 79–81; Ogden 2001, 180. Some modern examples in Merriield 1987, 162–175.
23
E.g. Pliny, HN 28.46 (fragment of nail against fever); Lucian, Philops. 17 and 24
(amuletic ring); Alexander of Tralles, herap. 1.1; there are also several Talmudic texts
in the same sense. Cf. Jobbé-Duval 1924/2000, 81; 192; Tupet 1976, 37–42; 84–87 and
1986, 2657–68; Veltri 1998, 69–70; Ogden 1999, 14; 19f. and 2002, 121–24; 141f.; 166f.;
Gordon 1999, 204–210; Hope 2000, 120–22; Dickie 2003, 175–192; Bohak 2008, 121f.
Some anthropological examples of the magical use of this type of nail in Marshall
1904, 334, n. 12; Bellucci 1919; and Gazin-Schwartz 2001, 270f.
442
silvia alfayé villa
clavos exemerit [sic] in oculos sibi igat, “May anyone who extracts
nails (from this coin) run himself through the eyes (in so doing)”.24
I should also mention in this prefatory discussion a group of nails
clearly used for magical purposes but connected neither with deixiones nor—I am inclined to think, against a certain consensus—with
the defunctive nails. hese are the so-called chiodi magici, which are
10–20cm long, made of bronze or iron, decorated with geometrical
patterns, sigla and/or charakteres, and show no signs of wear. A competent recent catalogue lists eighteen such nails, though at least one
or two more have been published.25 With some exceptions, they date
from III–IVp. Although the charakteres and other sigla make clear that
these objects are linked to magical practices, the lack of provenance
(most have come to light via the antiquities trade) means that their
interpretation is problematic. he decisive fact for me is that, unlike
the material I have presented in §2, not one of these nineteen chiodi
magici demonstrably derives from a funerary context.
We may in fact doubt whether such nails form a coherent functional group. he one that forms part of the so-called magician’s kit
(IIIp) found in the 1890s the lower city of Pergamon and now in the
Antikensammlung, Berlin is generally thought to have been used in
divination, although its precise mode d’emploi is controversial.26 his
may well have been the function of several others too, such as the one
found in the Rath/Apollo sanctuary of S. Antonio, in Caere.27 JobbéDuval however suggested many years ago that the nails used to cure
epilepsy (cf. the passage of Pliny cited n. 19 above) may have been of
this type.28 For his part, Toutain thought that some related Gaulish
examples may have been placed in sanctuaries as votive objects.29 he
24
CIL VI 7191 = ILS 8188. Cf. Brelich 1937, 12f.; Storoni 1973, 126f. no. LXII;
Maioli 2007, 108. Admittedly the aim of such thet may have been simply utilitarian
(cf. n. 6 above), like stripping churches of their lead and copper nowadays.
25
Bevilacqua 2001. Add to her total a bronze nail decorated with inlaid gold from
Tongres (Belgium); see Cumont 1914, 101f., pl. 67. he total is therefore 19+.
26
First published by Wünsch 1905; see the recent discussion between Mastrocinque
2002, 177–79 and Gordon 2002, 196f.
27
Colonna 2001, 151f.
28
Jobbé-Duval 1924/2000, 146.
29
Toutain 1920, 371 n. 2. Although he does not specify where these nails were
found, he may have been referring to the red-painted nails found in the fanum of
Harleur and in the thermal sanctuary of Fontaines-Salées, which were identiied by
their discoverers as clous votifs; cf. Vesly 1909, 144; Louis 1938, 299, ig. 37; and Lacroix 1956, 258–60, ig. 90, who dates the Fointaines-Salées nails to the 4th century CE.
Bevilacqua is ready to entertain the hypothesis (2001, 14).
nails for the dead
443
decorated bronze chiodi found in the sanctuary of the Venetic healinggoddess Reitia at Este-Baratela, SW of Padua, may also be votives.30
Rubensohn, followed recently by Bevilacqua, interpreted a lead nail
from Paros with the Greek inscription ΠΥΡ as a magical protection
against ire; it was perhaps knocked into the wall of the sanctuary of
Asclepius.31 he most plausible inference from the incised symbols is
that nails of this type were mainly used as amulets. he smaller examples may have been worn around the neck or elsewhere on the person
as protection against the evil eye or malign-magical attack. he dominant interpretation of the larger ones since the 19th century is that
they were placed in tombs along with other grave goods as phylacteries.32 In other words, they are deemed to be functionally identical with
the very much larger number of uninscribed nails certainly found in
such circumstances. As I have pointed out, this cannot be conirmed
in any instance, and in some cases is certainly wrong. It is of course
thinkable that they are simply expensive equivalents of uninscribed
defunctive nails, but there as yet is no proof (and even if one were
ever actually to be found in a grave, its interpretation would only be
an inference, not a ‘fact’) and in my view it would be best to reserve
judgement on the matter.
4. he Magical-ritual Use of Nails in Cemeteries
Disregarding the chiodi magici as perhaps a special case, the overwhelmingly dominant interpretation of the defunctive nails surveyed
30
hese nails are between 14 and 26cm long, and bear inscriptions (individual letters and geometrical shapes). hey are dated V–IVª. heir interpretation, like that of
the inscribed metal plaques from the same site, is controversial: Ghirardini thought
they were specially-made votives never intended to be used (1888, 20–37; 317–323);
Whatmough 1922 saw them as votive hairpins dedicated by women before marriage;
Pellegrini and Prosdocimi believe that they are non-functional Schreibgrifel linked
to a sanctuary where writing was a votive custom and had a predominantly magical-ritual use (1967, 140–168; cf. Pascucci 1990, 28; 161, ig. 63; Eibner 2007, 83, taf.
5/5–7). On Reitia see briely Pascal 1964, 112f.
31
Rubensohn 1902, 229; Marshall 1904, 334 n. 11; Bevilacqua 2001, 143.
32
Amulets: e.g. Elworthy 1895/1970, 328–330; Massoneau 1934, 113f.; Bevilacqua
2002, 132–134. In the late nineteenth century and irst half of the twentieth century it
was more or less taken for granted that such nails were talismans from tombs: Saglio
1892, 1241f.; Cagnat and Chapot 1920, 195f; Leclerq 1907, 1791. Wernet 1970, 12
claims that these items formed part of the ensemble of grave goods, although he does
not actually specify a necropolis, nor could he have done so.
444
silvia alfayé villa
in §2 has been that they were apotropaic amulets whose purpose was
to protect the deceased from threats in the Aterlife (§4.1). I do not
dispute this, but wish simply to argue that nails in a funerary context
may also have had other symbolic meanings which ought not to be
disregarded (§4.2–3). his justiies the word ‘polysemic’ in my title.
4.1. Nails as Apotropaic Amulets
he apotropaic use of nails has been recorded sporadically for the
Greek world, including Athens, Olynthus and Sicily.33 Most recorded
cases are however Roman, dating mainly to the period Iª–IIp. As I
have pointed out, most scholars have identiied such nails as rituallydeposited apotropaic talismans.34 In the case of the nails found in or
by Jewish tombs of the Second Temple Period in Palestine, Hachili
and Killebrew have argued that they are evidence of a custom taken
over from Greek usage. his cannot be shown directly, but they cite
some (much) later Rabbinical texts that speak of placing iron objects
between or inside tombs to protect them against harmful spirits.35 As
for the occasional inds of nails in late-antique tombs, they were once
believed, under the inluence of the hagiographic and apologetic tradition, to be instruments of martyrdom, but are now generally understood, along with bells, animal-teeth, coins and semi-precious stones,
as apotropaic amulets.36
A variant of this apotropaic hypothesis is that the nails may have
been understood as protecting the deceased from actual profanation of
the grave by metal-robbers or by magical practioners.37 Quite how the
nails are supposed to be efective in this context is, however, not clear
33
Elworthy 1895/1970, 328f.; Orsi 1899, 256 n. 2; Kurtz and Boardman 1971, 216;
Cutroni 1995, 193 n. 7.
34
Bruzza 1874, 51; Saglio 1892, 1244; Cagnat and Chapot 1920, 195; Baradez 1959,
217–8; Wernet 1970, 12–14; Raddatz 1973, 38; Nierhaus 1959, 48–9; Uglietti 1985,
562 n. 7; García Prósper and Guérin 2002, 210f.; Hoskins 2005, 277, n. 46; Moreno
2006, 250.
35
Hachlili and Killebrew 1999, 139f., 169; Hachlili 2005, 494, 511–516. On the Talmudic texts, see Veltri 1998, 80f. Trachtenberg mentions inter alia the Jewish custom
of placing metal over the corpse so as to protect it from harm by spirits (1939/1961,
174–180).
36
Martyrdom: Boldetti 1720, 319–326; Liverani 1872, 80, 134, 136–137, 139; Martigny 1877, 533; Leclercq 1948, 1389; 1948, 2037. Amulets: Leclercq 1948, 2036–7;
Testini 1980, 149; Giuntella 1990, 221; D’Angela 1995, 322f.; Nuzzo 2000, 253.
37
Ghirardini 1888, 319; LeGlay 1987, 248; Bevilacqua 2001, 133; Ceci 2001, 90;
Maioli 2007, 108, 215.
nails for the dead
445
to me: the ordinary understanding, that the nails are deployed only
against malign spirits or ghosts, is surely preferable. Can a nail really
be understood as a form of mute curse?
4.2. Nails for Keeping the Dead in Place
Four types of dead were commonly thought in the ancient world to
be dangerously ‘restless’, i.e. tended to haunt the place where they
had died: those who had died prematurely (Gk. aōroi), those who had
died violently (Gk. biaiothanatoi), those who had not received proper
funeral rituals (Gk. ataphoi, Lat. insepulti), and those who had died
before they were able to marry for the irst time (Gk. agamoi, Lat.
innupti).38 Given that fear of revenants or morts malfaisants is wellattested in antiquity, and that iron nails were believed to be able to
‘ix’ dangerous supernatural forces, some scholars have suggested that
this type of magic may also have served to protect the living against
the dead.39
here is one ancient source, albeit a burlesque, that repeatedly refers
to the use of iron bonds, magicum ferrum . . . vincula ferrea (§2; cf. 16),
to ix a ghost. he topic of one of the pseudo-Quintilianic declamations (IVp) is the attempt by a woman to sue her husband for having
hired a magician to ‘ix’ the ghost of her son who enjoyed repeated
visits to her ater his cremation, embracing her and remaining by
her all night long.40 he idea seems to have originated in taking the
wish sit tibi terra gravis literally (e.g. §7) and exploring the resulting possibilities in as absurd a manner as possible; the information
about the alleged rituals is of course vague in the extreme (the rhetor
was simply recycling literary tropes). However the use of iron bonds/
chains in such rituals is taken as common knowledge, in addition to
38
Cf. Cumont 1922, 128–147, 64–69; Johnston 1999, 127–199; Ogden 2002,
146–178; Alfayé 2009; cf. in general Jobbé-Duval 1924/2000; Stramaglia 1999; Felton
2000.
39
E.g. Cumont 1914, 101f.; Annequin 1973, 21; Black 1986, 223; Delattre and Magnan 1988, 147; Dungworth 1998, 153, 156; Ortelli 2001, 236f.; Riquier and Salé 2006,
72.
40
Declam. maior 10, pp. 199–219 Håkanson, partly tr. in Ogden 2002 no. 125;
cf. Ellis 1911; Wagenvoort 1927; Stramaglia 1999, 293–299, 308–323; Ogden 2001,
178–180; Schneider and Urlacher 2004; Alfayé 2009. As is well-known, this is the
sole example of such a theme in this collection. he documentary quality of these
declamations is of course problematic; I take it that the rhetor is alluding to ‘current
belief’, or ‘formerly current belief’, amalgamating ritual practices from a number of
diferent sources for efect.
446
silvia alfayé villa
rituals performed at the tomb and/or over the corpse (e.g. §2, 7f., 15,
18). Like nails, chains or stanchions are physical objects that can be
evoked in a number of diferent ways. It is familiar that statues of
deities and heroes might be bound with chains as a punishment or to
prevent them from moving; Pausanias for example describes how the
inhabitants of Orchomenus, following the directions of the Delphic
oracle, settled the malign ghost of Actaeon by giving proper burial
to his remains and erecting a bronze statue to him and ixing it to a
rock with iron.41 Pseudo-Quintilian also mentions that the magician
placed stones on the youth’s corpse (§8: ferro . . . ac lapidibus artare,
cf. 15), a ritual to prevent the dead from rising that happens to be
documented archaeologically in some of the Roman cemeteries studied in this paper.42 he magical practice of throwing spears—certainly
not swords—over the tomb or the corpse so as to ix “the emerging
ghost or render it powerless” (Cary and Nock 1927, 27)—also has an
archaeological correlate.43
he pseudo-Quintilianic text purports to describe a complex ritual
to ix an already active ghost. From there it is no great step to thinking
that nails may have been pre-emptively deposited in tombs to prevent
the dead from returning to disturb the living. A number of archaeologists have done just this, for example Doorselaer (Roman-period tombs
in northern Gaul); Petit (long iron nails placed on the lids of coins at
Lutetia); Giuntella (nails deliberately placed beside late-antique graves
on Sardinia); Hachlili and Killebrew (likewise, Second Temple period
Jewish tombs in Palestine); and Remesal (bronze nails beside tombs
at Baelo Claudia).44 In the early 1960s, Bérard interpreted the tips of
41
Paus. 9.38.5, cf. Faraone 1991, 168–179, 187, 197 n. 111; 1992, 83, 136–140; Johnston 1999, 59–62, 157f.; 2005, 303; Icard-Gianoglio 2004.
42
Cf. Alfayé 2009. Ampurias: Almagro 1955, 22, 90 (inh. Ballesta 6); Lutetia: Petit
1984, 348; Bourgeois 1984, 294; Pithekoussai: Buchner and Ridgway 1993, 123, tomb
104; Baelo Claudia: Paris et al. 1926, 92f. with pl. 57; Fresnes-sur-Marne: Delattre and
Magnan 1998, 147; London, Western Cemetery: Barber and Bowsher 2000, 323f. pl.
114; Poggio Gramignano: Soren and Soren 1999, 508, 518, 527, pl. 251, child’s tomb
IB 36.
43
E.g. Stead 1987, 234–237 (Garton Station, North Yorkshire); Alfayé 2009. Ogden
2002, 165 claims that [Quint.] also refers to “swords being driven down into the
grave, no doubt to pin the ghost down into it (compare the pinning of voodoo dolls
and curse tablets)” but I cannot locate the passage, nor does he provide a section
number.
44
Doorselaer 1967, 122 (“barrières interposées entre l’âme malfaisante et les
vivants”; the argument was picked up for Armorica by Galliou and Jones 1991, 113f.);
Petit 1984, 348; Giuntella 1990, 221 n. 10; Hachili and Killebrew 1999, 169; Hachlili
nails for the dead
447
nails (deliberately nipped of the shat) found scattered inside some
Gallo-Roman tombs at ‘La Calade’, Cabasse (dép. Var, I-IIIp) as “une
véritable ceinture prophylactique”.45 He reads one case in particular,
the infant-burial in tomb 40, where clusters of four nails were found
enclosing three olpai (jugs), a lamp and the child’s skull, as an efort
magically to ix an aōros to the grave. Some of these nails were bent
or had been deliberately thrust into the earth, a feature paralleled
in other Roman cemeteries, such as those of Picentia, Via Flaminia,
Baelo Claudia, Ampurias or ‘El Albir’, Valencia.46 At all these sites,
the practice seems to be employed systematically, i.e. non-casually,
which increases the likelihood that this was a deliberate ritual practice
intended to ix the dead.
It is apparent from the archaeological record that such ‘ixing’ rituals were generally performed at the same time as the corpse (or ashes)
was deposited in the tomb. he pseudo-Quintilianic declamation suggests however that there was, or might be, a scale of ritual violence
that could be exerted upon the dead. he most extreme form of such
violence—no doubt only in the case of very recalcitrant ghosts—was to
pierce the skull and/or other parts of the body with nails. his practice
is documented archaeologically for the ancient world: although nails
found within skeletal remains may occasionally be otherwise explained
(e.g. decomposition and collapse of the coin), it is usually clear that
the nails had been deliberately driven through the skull, the limbs or
2005, 511f.; Remesal 1979, 41 (noting “el considerable número de clavos de bronce
aparecidos fuera de las tumbas de la necrópolis de Baelo Claudia, colocados entre las
piedras que rodean las tumbas con la punta hacia fuera”); Sillières 1995, 98. See also
Bourgeois 1984, 294; Delattre and Magnan 1988, 147; Riquier and Salé 2006, 72.
45
Bérard 1961, 110–111; 115; 123; 135; 156–158 (tombs 3, 6, 13, 19, 20). For tomb
40, see idem 1963, 297–306. Other singular arrangements of nails detected in various
Gallic-Roman cemeteries have also been interpreted from a magical point of view; for
example, cf. Laet et al. 1972, 30, 115, pl. 72, 149b; Autexier 1976, 81 n. 7; Autexier et
al. 1978, 64; Chevillot and Moissat 1980, 227–8; Mondanel and Mondanel 1988, 98;
Allain 1972, 26, igs. 3–4; Allain et al. 1992, 128–129. However, as Ratel points out
1977, 83, the systematic identiication of these bizarre distributions of nails as ritual
evidence ought to be treated with caution.
46
Picentia: Lagi de Caro 1995, 347f.; Via Flaminia: Ortalli 2001, 237 ig. 2; Baelo
Claudia: Paris et al. 1926, 118f.; 190 nos. 46f.; Ampurias: Almagro 1955, 91 ig. 69 etc.;
‘El Albir’: González 2001, 360, who does not provide an explanation regarding the
peculiar placing of “dos clavos de gran tamaño introducidos en la tierra con la punta
hacia abajo”, placed under the tombstones and fragments of dolia which formed the
grave.
448
silvia alfayé villa
the abdomen.47 It has even been suggested that the piercing of Oedipus’ feet alludes to this practice, since it “seems to be a preemptive
ritual designed to cripple a ghost in its eforts to gain revenge”.48
hese two major hypotheses interpret the presence of one or more
nails in a tomb as a sympathetic magical practice primarily intended to
achieve one of two main conscious intentions: to ward of supernatural danger from the deceased, and to protect the living from revenants
by symbolically conining them to the grave.49 In any given case, unless
other analogous items are also present in the tomb, it is almost impossible to decide between them. Heuristically however we may posit a
continuum between the two poles, apotropaic and ‘ixing’: it seems
obvious that practices such as weighing down the corpse with stones,
or driving nails through it, are to be located much farther towards to
the latter pole than the mere burial of nails beside a tomb. Many cases,
perhaps the majority, will have been located somewhere in the middle
of the continuum, since the one intention by no means excludes the
other. I incline in fact to view the deliberate deposition of nails in a
funerary context as a ritual both for and against the dead, a magical
practice that included both rituals expressive of afection and rituals
intended to avert trouble from the unquiet dead. It may also be that
in many cases local custom or belief prescribed the dominant symbolic
purpose of such rituals.
4.3. Some Deviant Cases
his is however not quite the end of the story. here are a number of
archaeological inds of nails in a funerary context that do not it this
dual protective/defensive pattern but seem to reveal other, diferent,
symbolic intentions. hey serve to conirm my earlier point about the
evocative power of objects such as nails. At any rate, it seems clear that
these could be employed in defunctive contexts other than for protective purposes. We may take as an example inhumation-grave 110 at
Pithekoussai on Ischia (IIp), where a log was found on the corpse’s
47
Cf. Jobbé-Duval 1924/2000, 179–193; Alfayé 2009, eadem, forthcoming. On this
practice in the Mediaeval period, cf. Caciola 1996, 15–34; for modern parallels cf.
Lawson 1910, 361–484; Frazer 1933–6/2003, I, 75–87.
48
Faraone 1991, 182 n. 62; 194, n. 103.
49
he dual intention has been pointed out by Wolters 1935, 35–36; Wernet 1970,
14; Ratel 1977, 95f.; Chevillot and Moissat 1980, 228–9; Guillier 1992, 27; Hachlili and
Killebrew 1999, 139f., 169; Ortalli 2001, 236f; Maioli 2007, 215.
nails for the dead
449
abdomen with a 12cm long iron nail hammered through it, the tip
pointing towards the skull.50 A similar ritual practice, dating some ive
centuries earlier (IIIª), is attested by inhumation-grave 49 of the same
necropolis, and in other Roman graves in the cemetery of S. Montano,
also on Ischia.51 No ready explanation for this practice is available.
hen again, nails may be associated with deixiones in an atypical manner, for example in the cremation zone of the cemetery of Skt. Severin at Mautern on the Danube (Austria); or at Ampurias, where the
famous curse tablets were found in ash-urns along with small headless nails—possibly evidence of a ritual performed to empower the
execration.52 Finally, many cases in Gallo-Roman cemeteries (I-IVp),
and elsewhere, indicate that nails might be used to inlict ritual damage on grave goods such as ceramics or metal vessels.53
5. Magical Solutions to Deadly Problems54
Such considerations are however relatively marginal. he ritual deposition of nails in graves seems mainly to have been apotropaic (against
attack by malign spirits), protective/defensive (to protect the living
from potential revenants), or a mixture of both.55 Unfortunately, we
cannot tell whether the practice was reserved for the tombs of people
who, given the circumstances of their death or their degree of social
deviancy, were thought particularly likely to become ‘restless dead’.56
We can well imagine however that an attempt might have been made
to neutralise such potential threats by recourse to ritual action. It is
Buchner and Ridgway 1993, 126f. nos. 110–3 and 4, pl. CXI, no. 20.
Buchner and Ridgway 1993, 74–76, 126, pl. XCI no. 22.
52
Mautern (IIIp): Scherrer 1998, 26f. ; 71–79, pls. 14–15; Ampurias (Iª): Almagro
1955, 61–62, pls. 22f. (inc.-tombs Ballesta 22 and 23). Apart from resp. four and two
“vástagos cuadrados de clavitos sin cabeza”, the grave goods consisted of a cinerary
urn, the deixiones and, in the case of tomb 23, a small bronze tablet. he inclusion
of nails, therefore, appears to be deliberate. On these curse tablets, cf. Wilburn 2005,
156–83; and see further the paper by F. Marco Simón above (p. 399).
53
See Bérard 1963, 302–306; Ratel 1977, 92, 95 pl. 10; Chevillot and Moissat 1980,
207–14, 233–4, igs. 7–9; Mondanel and Mondanel 1988, 93f.; Simon-Hiernard 1990,
50, plate 25; Allain et al. 1992, 129, plates 40–4. Other instances in Spano 1859, 122;
Kurtz and Boardman 1971, 216 pl. 44; Almagro 1953, 72f. no. 1, pl. 39.
54
I borrow the expression from Johnston 1999, 38.
55
Lawson 1910, 410–412, 504–506. ‘Fixing’ the dead can also be understood as a
means of protection, since the ghost was thus helped to ind peace.
56
‘Restless dead’ is the title of Johnston 1999 (cf. n. 38 above). On the funerary
indications of social deviancy cf. Shay 1985; Hope 2000, 116–120; Alfayé 2009.
50
51
450
silvia alfayé villa
surely signiicant that a considerable percentage of the nails discussed
here derive from infants’ burials; infants are one of the categories of
particularly dangerous dead (see Table 2).57
On the other hand, this does not mean that such practices must
have been immutable or have had a single signiicance over their
whole range. Judging from the documentation analysed here, the practice established itself in the western part of the Roman Empire during
the Late Republic and became increasingly common during the High
Empire. his chronological and geographical spread still needs to be
explained.
We must also reject mono-causal explanations in favour of multifactorial approaches more in keeping with the polysemic signiicance
of the nail in the ancient world. Just to take the evidence of tomb 40
at ‘La Calade’, we can ind nails employed in the construction of the
coin, used to pass grave-goods ‘over’ into the next world, and again
as ritual deposits of my type.58 It is however obvious that if we are to
expand our material basis, we need meticulous excavations that actually see the light of day; we also need further secondary studies documenting the distribution, orientation and context of nails found in the
archaeological funerary record.59 More primary material and further
careful analysis ofer the only hope of identifying the symbolic value of
such nails more precisely, and so ultimately of teasing out their multiple meanings. Unfortunately, nails continue to be considered archaeologically insigniicant, and reports of cemetery excavations oten lack
detailed information on such items.
Nevertheless I believe that we already possess suicient data to support the view that the deliberate deposition of nails in tombs is a dual
form of protective magic. his conclusion does not necessarily exclude
other explanations; we should be looking for mutually complementary
accounts. As Lombardi puts it:
57
On this category, see Jobbé-Duval 1924/2000, 68–73; Vtervrugt-Lentz 1960; Johnston 1999, 161–199. Note some further instances of special rituals linked to children’s
burial in the Roman period: Bérard 1963; Hampartumian 1978, 473–477; Mondanel
and Mondanel 1988, 98–100; Allain et al. 1992, 128; Guillier 1992; Soren and Soren
1999, 461–652; Martin-Kircher 2000; Laubenheimer 2004; Vaquerizo 2004, 169–199;
Riquier and Salé 2006.
58
Bérard 1963, 295–306.
59
Autexier et al. 1978, 64.
nails for the dead
451
forse la spiegazione non esiste, esistono le spiegazioni . . . Non ci possiamo consentire l’ottimismo della spiegazione, dobbiamo ricercare le
spiegazioni tenendo conto che i simboli sono polisensi, e potrebbero
anche essere ambigui.60
Let me end by repeating the point that greater reinement in our understanding of the polysemic connotations of defunctive nails is only to
be expected if practical archaeologists regularly make a point in their
reports of ancient cemeteries of noting such apparently insigniicant
details in all their diversity, and if those reports are actually published.
Only when that primary information is available can others perform
the secondary task of comparison and analysis.
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