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  2. Birka grave Bj 581 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birka_grave_Bj_581

    Birka grave Bj 581 held a female Viking warrior buried with weapons during the 10th century in Birka, Sweden. Although the remains had been thought to be of a male warrior since the grave's excavation in 1878, both a 2014 osteological analysis and a 2017 DNA study proved that the remains were of a female.

  3. Grave goods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grave_goods

    An example of an extremely rich royal grave of the Iron Age is the Terracotta Army of Qin Shi Huang. [ 16 ] In the sphere of the Roman Empire , early Christian graves lack grave goods, and grave goods tend to disappear with the decline of Greco-Roman polytheism in the 5th and 6th centuries.

  4. Funerary art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funerary_art

    Funerary art may serve many cultural functions. It can play a role in burial rites, serve as an article for use by the dead in the afterlife, and celebrate the life and accomplishments of the dead, whether as part of kinship-centred practices of ancestor veneration or as a publicly directed dynastic display. It can also function as a reminder ...

  5. Mortuary archaeology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortuary_Archaeology

    The position of the burial looks at the body, the head, and the arms separately. The position could help researchers say something about the populations ideas of death as well as common burial practices. There are two positions the body can be placed in. First is the extended position, where the individual is laid flat.

  6. Beehive tomb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beehive_tomb

    After a burial, the entrance to the tomb was filled in with soil, leaving a small mound with most of the tomb underground. The chamber is always built in masonry, even in the earliest examples, as is the stomion or entrance-way. The dromos in early examples was usually just cut from the bedrock, as in the Panagia Tomb at Mycenae itself.

  7. Burying in Woollen Acts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burying_in_Woollen_Acts

    The Burying in Woollen Acts 1666–80 were acts of the Parliament of England (citation 18 & 19 Cha. 2.c. 4 (1666), [1] [2] 30 Cha. 2.c. 3 (1678) [3] and 32 Cha. 2.c. 1 (1680) [4]) which required the dead, except plague victims and the destitute, to be buried in pure English woollen shrouds to the exclusion of any foreign textiles.

  8. Tumulus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumulus

    This site has been pointed to as an early example of the burial traditions characteristic of the Maritime Archaic Community. Similar sites are located throughout this region, although this tradition seems to have reached its peak around 1,000 years after the construction of the site at L'Anse Amour. Many of these Maritime Archaic burial sites ...

  9. Unmarked grave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unmarked_grave

    For example, basketball player Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna, singer Michael Jackson, businessman and Apple's Founder Steve Jobs, actor George C. Scott, musician Frank Zappa, singer Roy Orbison, comedian John Belushi, and writer H. P. Lovecraft (discussed below) are notable people whose burial sites have been left unmarked (or marked ...