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NUPTIAL RITES

Volume 13 · 149 words · 1797 Edition

the ceremonies attending the solemnization of marriage, which are different in different ages and countries. We cannot omit here a custom which was practised by the Romans on these occasions; which was this: Immediately after the chief ceremonies were over, the new-married man threw nuts about the room for the boys to scramble for. Various reasons have been assigned for it; but that which most generally prevails, and seems to be the most just, is, that by this act the bridegroom signified his resolution to abandon trifles, and commence a serious course of life; whence nucibus relicitis in this sense became a proverb. They might also be an emblem of fertility.

The ancient Greeks had a person to conduct the bride from her own to the bridegroom's house; and hence he was called by the Greeks Nympogogos, which term was afterwards used both by the Romans and the Jews.