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References
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Burial Customs of the Romans - jstorRoman burial was a religious duty, even for criminals, with a symbolic burial for strangers. Failure to complete rites required a sacrifice. Even cremation ...
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LacusCurtius • The Roman Funeral (Smith's Dictionary, 1875)May 19, 2020 · The corpse was usually carried out of the house (efferebatur) on the eighth day after death (Serv. ad Virg. Aen. V.64). The order of the funeral ...
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Death and Burial in the Roman World - Bryn Mawr Classical ReviewJun 10, 1997 · Chapter 3 (pp. 43-72) is a lucid summary of the evidence for Roman funerary customs ( funus translaticum, funus militare, funus publicum, and ...
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[5]
Roman Funeral Remains J. M. C. Toynbee: Death and Burial in the ...She argues that the gradual change from cremation to inhumation which took place in the early Empire mirrors the increasing importance which people (and not ...
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[6]
[PDF] How Burial Practices in Roman Britain Reflect Changes in Belief ...May 4, 2025 · Burial practices in Roman Britain reflect a hybridization of Roman and British beliefs, with shifts in mortuary practices reflecting societal ...
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[7]
Roman Life Expectancy: The Pannonian Evidence - jstor... Roman World," CQ 32 (1982). 114-116, at 115. By and large, the now prevalent scholarly view that Roman life expectancy at birth must have been ca 20-30 years ...
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[PDF] Archaeological and epigraphic evidence for infancy in the Roman ...Modern estimates place the mortality rate of children in the first year of life between 20-40 per cent (Hopkins 1966; 1983: 225; Golden 1988: 155; Garnsey 1991: ...
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[10]
Disease and death in the ancient city of Rome - Academia.eduThis paper surveys textual and physical evidence of disease and mortality in the city of Rome in the late republican and imperial periods.
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Disease and Death in the Ancient City of Rome by Walter ScheidelFeb 21, 2009 · This paper surveys textual and physical evidence of disease and mortality in the city of Rome in the late republican and imperial periods.Missing: common | Show results with:common
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[12]
(PDF) Roman Life Expectancy: Ulpian's Evidence - ResearchGateAug 6, 2025 · The empirical data on mortality for the Roman period stem from epigraphic evidence on tombstones, skeletal material and a limited number of ...
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Ancient Roman Funerary Practices - BrewminateDec 2, 2020 · In Greco-Roman antiquity, the bodies of the dead were regarded as polluting. At the same time, loving duty toward one's ancestors (pietas) was a ...
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[14]
Pietas | Roman Virtues, Civic Duty & Loyalty - BritannicaOct 11, 2025 · Pietas, in Roman religion, is the personification of a respectful and faithful attachment to gods, country, and relatives, especially parents.
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[15]
The Ancient Roman Afterlife: Di Manes, Belief, and the Cult of the ...... Romans could eliminate it without loss of pietas with the dead. If, however, the dominant tradition distinguished strongly between manes and lemures, then ...
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Funerary Practices Ancient Rome: Death in Ancient RomeThe paterfamilias, or head of the family, typically arranged and financed funerals. If the deceased was the paterfamilias, the financial responsibility fell to ...
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ANCIENT ROMAN FUNERALS - Facts and DetailsWhen the Roman died at home surrounded by his family, it was the duty of his oldest son to bend over the body and call him by name, as if with the hope of ...Missing: pietas | Show results with:pietas
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Parentalia | Ancestors, Lares & Manes - BritannicaOct 11, 2025 · Parentalia, Roman religious festival held in honour of the dead. The festival, which began at noon on February 13 and culminated on February 21 ...Missing: obligations | Show results with:obligations
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[20]
Parentalia - Festival of the Ancestors - VindolandaFeb 21, 2021 · Parentalia was a nine-day festival of rites and rituals celebrating deceased family ancestors, and later developed to include all the dead (di Manes).Missing: obligations | Show results with:obligations
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Veneration of the Dead Festivals - Terri BruceWhat was unique about Parentalia was that it was a state-mandated responsibility for the head of the family to perform the rites of the celebration. That's ...Missing: obligations | Show results with:obligations
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[PDF] THE ROMAN FUNERARY COMMEMORATION OF CHILDRENwithin the family played by pietas, which means the reciprocal affection and obligation between members of the family. Pietas did involve filial obedience ...<|separator|>
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[23]
Necropolis - | Lapham's QuarterlyRoman law took this prohibition seriously: fines for city burial could run five times the annual salary of a legionary. Exceptions were made for children less ...
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[24]
The Romans and their Dead - Southern California SeminaryHistorians of the Roman culture in Late Antiquity have observed the existence of elaborate laws for the disposal of the dead. For example, in his treatment of ...
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[25]
THE ROMAN LAW ON BURIALS AND BURIAL GROUNDS - jstorNowadays canon law controls exhumation and reburial but in the context of what is permitted by the law of the state. An inscription (72), probably of the ...
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[26]
[PDF] Spectacle in the Roman Imperial Funeral ProcessionRoman imperial funerals were spectacular, not to honor the deceased, but to cement their place in Rome's cultural memory and validate the successor.
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Roman Funeral Customs | UNRV Roman HistoryThe Romans practiced both cremation and inhumation (burial) throughout their history. Cremation was more common in the early Republic and Imperial periods.Roman Burial Sites And... · Cultural Practices And... · Transition And...
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The Roman Funeral - World History EncyclopediaJan 18, 2012 · Generally, there were five parts to a Roman funeral: A procession, cremation and burial, eulogy, feast, and commemoration.
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[PDF] The burial of the urban poor in Italy in the late Republic and early ...ancient and modem attitudes towards the Roman poor and poverty and examines the ... rubbish, animal cadavers and human corpses in the context of the burial of the ...
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[30]
Graham, E-J. 2006. The burial of the urban poor in Italy in the late ...This volume examines the burial practices of the urban poor in ancient Rome during the late Roman Republic and early Empire.
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Roman funerary practices - WikipediaRoman funerary practices include the Ancient Romans' religious rituals concerning funerals, cremations, and burials. They were part of time-hallowed tradition ...Funeral procession · Disposal · Commemorations · Graves, tombs, and cemeteries
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Undertakers, Executioners and Potter's Fields in Ancient Rome - 2000The paper explores the complex relationship between death, burial practices, and the associated social roles in ancient Rome
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The area around the Porta Laurentina - The Roman undertakersA very rich source of information about the undertakers are two inscriptions with copies of laws, usually referred to as leges libitinariae.
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Burials in Ancient Rome - International Catacomb SocietyDetailed instructions for burial, the creation of various types of funerary monuments, the planting of orchards, and the continuation of rituals<|separator|>
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[310] Regulations of the Worshippers of Diana and Antinoüs (136 CE)Pleiades map), 136 CE (June 9) AGRW 310 = CIL XIV 2112 = ILS 7212 = AGRW ID# 4043. ▻ abbreviation guide.
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Associations, funerals, sociality, and Roman law: the collegium of ...A detailed analysis of CIL XIV 2112 = ILS 7212, an inscription detailing the status and life of an association (collegium) of worshipers of Diana and Antinous ...
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[PDF] Collegia through their funeral activities: new light on sociability in the ...Collegia were voluntary associations and involved people getting together in professional or religious bonds in cities and towns. The present paper examines ...Missing: libitinariorum | Show results with:libitinariorum
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New Evidence from Ankara for the collegia veteranorum and ... - jstorA tombstone of a legionary centurion found in Ankara proves to be of wider and greater significance than was origi nally recognised.
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LacusCurtius • The Roman Funeral (Smith's Dictionary, 1875)### Summary of Initial Rites After Death in Roman Funerals
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(PDF) Burial customs and the pollution of death in ancient RomeIn the Roman Imperial Period's western provinces, family members were buried individually but collectively recognized as part of a family grave within a marked ...
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Funeral rites - NovaRomaMar 31, 2009 · Traditionally the body is then placed on the ground where it meets with the earth, deponere (Ovid Pont. 2.2.45). Symbolically this represented ...Missing: duties | Show results with:duties
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The fragrant dead: How to treat your dead, the Roman wayFeb 17, 2016 · Within Roman society, highly aromatic resins were important in ritual activity, and sometimes even applied directly to the body at death.
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Funeral Rites and Customs in the Roman Empire - Hrčak - SrceFeb 27, 2022 · After the body of the deceased was prepared, that is, washed in warm water, anointed with oils, and decorated with flowers, it would be ...Missing: funerary practices
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Roman funeral rituals and social status: the Amiternum tomb and the ...Such mourning rituals included wailing, chest-beating, and sometimes self-mutilation —pulling of the hair and laceration of the cheeks. The deceased's corpse ...Missing: primary | Show results with:primary
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Roman funeral rituals and social status: The Amiternum tomb and ...Upon death, dramatic displays of mourning were performed by household members of the deceased's family. Such mourning rituals included wailing, chest-beating, ...Missing: announcing | Show results with:announcing
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Pompa in Pompeii: experiencing a funeral procession in the ancient ...The unique archaeological and epigraphic evidence preserved in Pompeii allows potential routes of funeral processions for individuals to be recreated, linking ...
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Laudatio Funebris - jstorThe laudatio funebris consisted of two parts, each taking up about half the oration. It was at once a eulogy of an individual and of his ancestors.5l When the ...
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16 Fragments of Epideictic Oratory: The Exemplary Case of the ...Funeral eulogies are among the older examples of Roman oratory. The practice of honouring the dead with a laudatio funebris (funeral oration) was in the ...
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Laudatio funebris - Flower - Major Reference WorksOct 26, 2012 · Laudatio funebris was the name given to public eulogies of Roman politicians delivered at their funerals. References and Suggested Readings.Missing: practices | Show results with:practices
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[PDF] The Sociopolitical Spectacle of Death, Dynasty, and the Funeral ...On its way to the burial site the procession would stop in the forum Romanum, the most important civic and cultural center of ancient Rome, where a funeral ...
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Funeral eulogy and propaganda in the Roman Republic (Laudatio ...Aug 6, 2025 · ... laudatio funebris in the Republic are by no means abundant, it is ... Polybius (ca. BC 200 - after 118) and Dionysius of Halicarnassus ...
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Libitina's laborers: praeficae and the origins of the Roman funerary ...The praefica's role transitioned from praise-singer in early funerals to a facilitator for mourning, largely due to social changes during and after the Second ...
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Gendering the Roman imago – Eugesta - Peren RevuesAn elite woman could have a funus indictivum (public funeral), including a laudatio funebris, by 102 BCE at the latest, and probably much earlier110. Moreover, ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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The Laudatio Turiae, a 2,100 years old Love LetterSep 6, 2024 · The laudatio funebris traditionally interrupted the funeral procession as it moved from the home of the deceased to the place of burial or ...
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(PDF) Roman Imperial Funeral: The Emperor's Final Triumph... Roman imperial funeral was a spectacle that consisted of processions, orations, and the burning of a grand funerary pyre. Due to the destructive nature of ...<|separator|>
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15 Of Fragments and Feelings: Roman Funeral Oratory RevisitedThe article revisits the topic of Roman funeral orations (laudationes funebres). Several funeral speeches from the Republican period survive in fragments.Missing: eulogy | Show results with:eulogy
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Roman Imperial Cinerary Urns – Production and Display, by J. Cody ...This project is a synthetic study of Roman imperial cinerary monuments, funerary urns, altars, and similar vessels made to hold cremated remains of Rome's dead.
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Building a Roman Funeral Pyre | Antichthon | Cambridge CoreMay 8, 2015 · In this paper I shall try to combine literary and archaeological evidence to reconstruct how the pyre was prepared.Missing: construction | Show results with:construction
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ODYSSEY/Rome/Death&Burial - the Carlos MuseumRomans practiced cremation and inhumation. Burials were initially along roads, then in cemeteries and catacombs. Inhumation became more popular later.
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[PDF] Beyond the Grave: Excavating the Dead in the Late Roman ProvincesAug 29, 2013 · Peer reviewed version. Link to publication record in King's Research ... (1991) Burial Practices in Roman Britain. A Survey of Grave ...
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A Roman Funeral - Cremation in a Roman Port TownDuring the first and second centuries AD, cremation was the most common burial practice in the Roman empire. Ultimately inhumation would replace cremation.Missing: customs | Show results with:customs
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Ancient Roman Burial Practices - Rome - ThoughtCoNov 25, 2019 · Into the 1st century, cremation was the norm and burial and embalming were referred to as a foreign custom. This changed by the 4th century.Missing: shift | Show results with:shift
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The Roman World | Death & Burial - Penn MuseumRoman funerary practices shifted between burning the bodies of the dead (cremation) and burying them intact (inhumation). Graves varied from simple ...
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New Bioarchaeological Evidence for the Rite of "Os Resectum"Apr 16, 2019 · Os resectum, or “cut bone,” is an obscure Roman funerary rite known primarily from literary sources. To date, archaeological examples have ...
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The Practice of Os Resectum | Bones Don't Lie - WordPress.comNov 29, 2011 · One argument is that os resectum is symbolic of burial of the individual when the rest of the body was cremated.
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Becoming persons, becoming ancestors. Personhood, memory and ...Aug 6, 2009 · This article examines the role of social memory and the treatment of the corpse within the reconfiguration of personhood in the Roman world.
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Roman funeral - IMPERIUM ROMANUMFrom the very beginning of Roman statehood, the Roman funeral was divided into two ways to send the dead away: smoking and burying.Missing: duties | Show results with:duties
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Archaeologists Unearth Ancient Roman Cemetery Full of Jewelry ...Jan 19, 2024 · Along with nearly 70 skeletons interred in carefully constructed graves, researchers found precious jewelry, leather goods, pottery and coins.
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17 Roman graves unearthed in Heidelberg-NeuenheimJan 10, 2025 · The archaeologists found a total of 12 cremation burials, 5 inhumation burials, and a horse burial. ... grave goods comprising ceramic plates, ...
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Meals for the dead: investigating Romano-British accessory vessels ...Aug 1, 2024 · Accessory vessels, including platters, dishes, beakers, flagons, jars, and amphorae, are a common feature of Romano-British burials, ...
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bioarchaeology of care in a 2nd–3rd century CE burial from Roman ...The burial is accompanied by a complex set of grave goods, including four lamps, four glass pieces, three accus crinalis, a ceramic plaque, a shell, a ceramic ...
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Food for the soul and food for the body. Studying dietary patterns ...Aug 24, 2022 · Specifically, the most consumed meat during the funerary banquets and used for the offerings to the deceased were those of pork and beef, ...
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1430 ancient Roman graves scattered with funerary festival leftovers ...including dates, figs, cereals and bread. Archaeologists think these were left over ...
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[PDF] Chapter 4: The Roman evidenceOn Site D a single early Roman high status crema- tion burial accompanied by a wide range of exotic metalwork and pottery grave goods was found within the large ...
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[PDF] Mortuary practices on children - Digital Scholarship@UNLVPrior to the 4th century A. D., Romans believed that a child who died before nine days old should receive burial without ceremony and no mourning, so they were ...
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(PDF) Infant Death and Burial in Roman Italy, Journal of Roman ...May 31, 2025 · ... (estimated) Roman infant mortality rates are re ected fairly accurately at this. site. There is no clear correlation between the size of the ...
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News - Roman-Era Necropolis for Infants Uncovered in FranceJun 19, 2024 · A pearl, a coin, a spindle, and a miniature ceramic cup were among the few grave goods recovered.
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Girls and Dolls in the Roman Empire - JSTOR DailyMar 28, 2021 · Over 500 objects excavated from the Roman Empire have been identified as dolls, primarily girls' playthings, and over a dozen have been buried ...Missing: burials | Show results with:burials<|control11|><|separator|>
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Toys found in Roman-era child graves in Turkey - The History BlogOct 2, 2017 · Clay figurines, some "Barbie-like" dolls, were found. Some were for play, others for the afterworld, and some were symbolic. Female figurines ...
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Full article: The Ceramic 'Infant Feeding' Vessels of Roman BritainMar 24, 2025 · “Discussion of Selected Grave Goods.” In The Western Cemetery of Roman Cirencester. Excavations at the Former Bridges Garage, Tetbury Road ...
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[PDF] GLADIATORIAL GAMES, SACRIFICIAL RITUAL AND LITERARY ...The funeral games for Patroklos in book 23 of The Iliad are significant in a discussion ofthe Roman games not merely as an instance ofliterary allusion, but ...
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[PDF] Blood Sacrifice: The Connection Between Roman Death Rituals and ...Death was a public affair, one that should bring honor to the dying and those who survived them. Death was a spectacle, a means of entertainment or a ritual to ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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[PDF] Staring into the Face of Roman Power - eScholarshipStarting with the first recorded gladiatorial munus given at Rome in 264 BC, sponsored by the sons of D. Junius Brutus Pera in honor of their deceased ...
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Behind the Spectacle - Popular ArcheologyNov 21, 2024 · The first gladiatorial games, according to Livy, were performed in Rome in 264 B.C. to honor the funerary celebrations for Iunius Brutus. Two ...
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Appeasing the Ancestors: The Parentalia and Feralia.Feb 8, 2019 · As such, it was customary for living relatives to visit family graves on the deceased's birthday, to celebrate the day and remember the life of ...Missing: obligations | Show results with:obligations
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Lemuria the Ancient Roman Day of the Dead - ThoughtCoAug 27, 2018 · Lemuria was an ancient Roman festival where families gave offerings to honor their dead ancestors. Romans performed special rituals during ...
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[PDF] After life in Roman paganism - The Warburg Institute... Manes or Lemures had no marked personality or clearly characterised ... cults which spread under the empire. It had supplied the first type of the ...
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The Origin of the Cult of the LaresThe testimony of the ancients, then, affords but feeble support for the theory that the cult of the Lares was a worship of souls. What can be said about the ...
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[PDF] Sacred Ritual, Profane Space: The Roman House as Early Christian ...Further to the rituals specifically associated to death, burial, and funerary ... Certainly the ancestor cult had protective functions, just as the lares and ...
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Roman Inscriptions - The Metropolitan Museum of ArtFeb 1, 2009 · The Romans often used such inscriptions to record very precise details about the deceased, such as their age, occupation, and life history.Missing: formulas | Show results with:formulas
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Latin Inscriptions: Epitaphs - ATTALUSLatin Inscriptions: Epitaphs. Inscriptions from the time of the Roman Republic, translated by E.H.Warmington (1940). The numbers in red refer to the Latin ...Missing: formulas | Show results with:formulas<|separator|>
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[PDF] Epitaphs as an Introduction to Latin Epigraphy - CrossWorksEpitaphs carved on grave-markers provide an easy entry to the study of epigraphy and can be particularly useful as an occasional supplement for many Latin ...
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The Roman life course: a view from the inscriptions - Academia.eduRoman epitaphs reflect cultural biases in age and gender, influencing perceptions of the life course. · Age at death is often rounded, complicating demographic ...
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[PDF] Global patterns of commemoration in Roman epitaphsMar 2, 2020 · This thesis provides a quantitative analysis of common formulae in thousands of Roman epitaphs and maps their geographical distribution to ...
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[PDF] Roman Funerary Sculpture: Catalogue of the Collections6 This opening was designed to receive offerings into the sarcophagus after burial. ... Some of them depict children or erotes; few of them depict adults or, as ...
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(PDF) Symbolic Meaning of Roman Funerary Art in Late AntiquityEssay on possible symbolism in funerary art of Late Antiquity in epitaphs, mural decorations, and sarcophagi of the 3rd century AD.
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Introduction - The Death of Myth on Roman SarcophagiThe effect on Roman funerary art was almost immediate. Beginning around 313 CE, following Constantine's edicts, Christian sarcophagi entered a period of ...
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Sarcophagi and Funerary Display in Roman AphrodisiasRoman sarcophagi and their sculpted reliefs have long been of interest to scholars, particularly in terms of mythological subject matter, sculptural style, ...
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'Unfinished Portrait Heads' on Later Roman Sarcophagi - jstorAs in so much interpretative work on Roman funerary art, there is no har fast explanation for these unfinished portrait heads. But it is hoped that paper ...Missing: peer- | Show results with:peer-
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Roman Death Masks and the Metaphorics of the Negative - jstorHow did the ancient Romans conceptualize the relation between plaster mold and the wax likeness “expressed” from its matrix? And how do these ancient ideas ...<|separator|>
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Roman death masks - IMPERIUM ROMANUMMay 19, 2020 · The death masks of the Romans (imagines maiorum) were made of beeswax – a very expensive substance at that time. Wax could not survive to ...Missing: evidence | Show results with:evidence
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[PDF] Ancestors at the gateMy paper, through close analysis of Roman liter- ary and material evidence, argues that the imagines maiorum were not masks but complete portable wax heads; ...
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Roman Ancestor Death Masks: The Wax Faces That Walked at ...Oct 16, 2025 · Elite Romans wore wax masks of dead ancestors at funerals, literally resurrecting the dead—6,000 masked figures walked at Sulla's funeral in 78 ...
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Imagines maiorum and posthumous masks of ancient civilizationsThis paper deals with depictions of deceased in antiquity, specifically it focuses on the Roman imagines maiorum and the issue of their form.
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Grad students create lifelike 'Roman' funeral masks - Cornell ChronicleFeb 17, 2014 · In the heyday of the Roman empire, wealthy and politically powerful families would create wax masks of the male elites in the family.Missing: evidence | Show results with:evidence
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The Avalon Project : The Twelve TablesTradition tells us that the code was composed by a commission, first of ten and then of twelve men, in 451-450 B.C., was ratifed by the Centuriate Assembly in ...Missing: undertakers | Show results with:undertakers<|control11|><|separator|>
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(PDF) Late Roman burials in urban contexts: old questions and new ...Late Roman funerary practices shifted significantly from suburban to intramural spaces beginning in the 3rd century. Dispersed burials in urban areas became ...
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(PDF) The life and death of ancient Roman cemeteries. Living with ...Introduction Imperial Rome was hemmed around by her dead. Already by the middle of the first century BCE the traditional Roman practices of extramural burial ...
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List of Tombs Along the Appian Way - Madain Project (en)Among these, notable examples include the imposing Tomb of Cecilia Metella, the circular mausoleum of the Scipios, and the well-preserved Catacombs of San ...
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Catacombs on the Appian Way - Madain Project (en)The Catacombs on the Appian Way are ancient underground burial sites along the Via Appia, serving as cemeteries for Romans, Christians, and Jews, and carved ...<|separator|>
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[PDF] preliminary observations on burial and settlement space in rural ...Rural burial in the Roman world has been associated with the marking of property boundaries (e.g. Miles 1985: 40), but more complex relationships between ...
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[PDF] The Roman Rural Settlement Project - Cotswold Archaeology34% of burials (1233) from 25 nucleated settlements. • 21% of burials (763) from 152 farms (higher % from linear). • 8% of burials (282) from 35 villas (mostly ...
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Expedition Magazine | A Roman Town Cemetery at Gordion, TurkeyIn many ways, the Common Cemetery is typical of rural necropoleis dating to the 2nd-4th century AD and found throughout the Roman world. The location of the ...
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Death's Mansions: The Columbaria of Imperial RomeNov 3, 2014 · A columbarium is an underground chamber, which the Romans used for preserving the ashes of the dead. During the 1st and 2nd centuries CE, ...Columbarium Clubs · Columbaria Size & Shape · Columbarium Epitaphs &...
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Mausoleum of HadrianIn it were placed the cinerary urns of Hadrian; Antoninus Pius and his wife, Faustina; Lucius Verus; Marcus Aurelius and his son, Commodus; Septimius Severus ...
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Roman Sarcophagi - The Metropolitan Museum of ArtApr 1, 2007 · A large number are carved with garlands of fruit and leaves, evoking the actual garlands frequently used to decorate tombs and altars.
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Marble sarcophagus with the Triumph of Dionysos and the SeasonsThe sarcophagus is an exquisite example of Roman funerary art, displaying all the virtuosity of the workshop where it was carved. The marble comes from a ...
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The Reuse of Strigillated Sarcophagi - Oxford AcademicThe following examples represent two functions for which strigillated sarcophagi were regularly chosen—burial and architectural decoration. Elite burials: Pisa ...
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Architecture | Ancient Roman Tombs - Ancient Rome LiveThe mausoleum contained the ashes of Augustus, along with fellow emperors Tiberius, Claudius, and Nerva. The second was Trajan's Column, which housed the ashes ...
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The mausoleums of Rome: tombs become beautiful monumentsMausoleums in Rome are large tombs, built as monuments to preserve emperors' remains, with gold and decorated rooms. Examples include Augustus, Hadrian, Cestia ...
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None### Summary of Roman Military Funerary Customs
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Roman pig jaw burial found at Legio—first evidence in the LevantMay 16, 2025 · Roman writers note that graves were made legally “clean” only after a sow was offered (Cicero, Leges 2.22.55), and that the nine-day mourning ...<|separator|>
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The Roman GamesBut if it was in Rome itself, or in the provinces, Roman games were now no longer dedicated to the memory of the deceased but in honour of the emperor. Roman ...
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Claudia Moser - Brown UniversityRomans began favoring inhumation, a practice whose increasing popularity and status can be seen in the large collections of diverse, extant sarcophagi, over ...
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Death as a Process: The Archaeology of the Roman Funeral - jstorRoman funerals involved a complex process, with death as a biological event and a series of behaviors among mourners, and rituals meant for the living.
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Burial, society and context in the provincial Roman worldCremation was the dominant burial custom in Rome from the second century BC to the second to third centuries AD (Noy 2000b), and the adoption of this burial ...
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Archaeologists uncover Roman-era early settler burials in GermanySep 20, 2023 · In total, the archaeologists unearthed 46 graves at the site, predominantly consisting of 44 cremation burials, with only two inhumations.
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[PDF] Pig Sacrifice and Feasting in Roman Funerary PracticesThis study presents new evidence of the role of pigs in Roman military ceremonies, specifically in funerary practices, based on comparable archaeological data ...
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News - First-Ever Monumental Roman Tomb Unearthed in AlbaniaSep 10, 2025 · BULQIZA, ALBANIA—Albanian archaeologists made a surprising discovery near the city of Bulqiza after locals notified authorities about an ...
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Burial evidence from Roman Britain : the un-numbered dead - PerséeAlthough at first sight relatively abundant, burial data from Britain are shown to derive disproportionately from late Roman urban cemeteries in the south of ...
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The Ancient Roman Afterlife - University of Texas PressApr 28, 2020 · Exploring the place of the manes in Roman society, Charles King delves into Roman beliefs about their powers to sustain life and bring death to ...
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The ancient Roman afterlife: di manes, belief, and the cult of the deadFeb 12, 2021 · Chapter Six (“The Manes in the Context of the Funeral”) treats the transformation of a dead person's spirit into a manes through funerary ritual ...Missing: rites | Show results with:rites
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Roman Underworld and Afterlife - UNRV.comAdditionally, ritualistic games, or "ludi funebres," were sometimes held in honor of the dead, especially for prominent individuals. These games could include ...
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[PDF] 7.7 - Roman Festivals of the DeadIn contrast to the Parentalia, the Lemuria was a very private ceremony, taking place entirely in the home and designed to appease and drive away the lemurēs,.<|control11|><|separator|>
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Epicurus - Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophyJan 10, 2005 · First, it is the basis of Epicurus' demonstration that the soul does not survive the death of the body (other arguments to this effect are ...
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Why Death is Nothing to Fear: Lucretius and EpicureanismAccording to Lucretius, our fear of death is buried deep, and not always conscious: its presence “tinges everything we do with death's blackness, leaving no ...
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Epicurean Evaluations of Death (Chapter 5)The writing of Lucretius suggests a third explanation for the prominence of death in Epicurean writing. The fear of death is responsible for other human evils ( ...
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[PDF] Stoicism in Ancient Rome: Philosophical Attitudes Toward Death ...This paper investigates the convergence of Roman ancestral customs and Stoic philosophy during the Republic's decline, focusing on how Stoicism provided both a.Missing: skepticism | Show results with:skepticism
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History of Memento Mori - Daily Stoic“Memento Mori,” or translated in English, “Remember you must die.” The point of this reminder isn't to be morbid or promote fear, but to inspire, motivate and ...
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The Contemplation of Death: Sample Chapter from Teach Yourself ...Oct 10, 2014 · The Stoic ideal holds that the Sage, the man we should seek to emulate, “finds it a joy to live and in spite of that is not reluctant to die”, ...Missing: funerary customs
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5 Important Schools of Philosophy in Ancient Rome | TheCollectorJun 18, 2025 · This article explores five key Roman schools of philosophy—Stoicism, Epicureanism, Neoplatonism, Skepticism, and Cynicism—along with some of ...1. Stoicism · 2. Epicureanism · 3. Neoplatonism
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[PDF] Stoics, Epicureans and Sceptics: An Introduction to Hellenistic ...This study gives a comprehensive and readable account of the principal doctrines of the Stoics, Epicureans and various sceptical.