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  2. Tomb effigy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomb_effigy

    European tomb monuments adapted innovations from other forms of sculpture during the early modern period, including from non-European influence. [16] However, in part driven by Enlightenment attitudes towards religion, the human body and the possibility of an afterlife, [68] by the 1750s effigies had largely fallen out of use across Europe.

  3. Coffin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffin

    Continental Europe at one time favoured the rectangular coffin or casket, although variations exist in size and shape. The rectangular form, and also the trapezoidal form, is still regularly used in Germany, Austria, Hungary and other parts of Eastern and Central Europe, with the lid sometimes made to slope gently from the head down towards the ...

  4. Coffin portrait - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffin_portrait

    English: Jan Gniewosz [lord] of Oleksów, castellan of Czchów [1] Coffin portraits in the National Museum in Warsaw. A coffin portrait (Polish: Portret trumienny) was a realistic portrait of the deceased person put on coffins for the funeral and one of the elements of the castrum doloris, but removed before the burial.

  5. Anglo-Saxon burial mounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxon_burial_mounds

    By the sixth century CE, when the practice of building burial mounds is first adopted by the Anglo-Saxons, it was also being practiced by other Germanic-speaking peoples on continental Europe. In the German region of Thuringia , several important chamber burial barrows have been excavated, including at a cemetery in Trossingen which dates to c ...

  6. St Cuthbert's coffin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Cuthbert's_coffin

    The art-historian Ernst Kitzinger, then with the British Museum, made a reconstruction of the carved oak sections in 1939, which has subsequently been slightly re-arranged. [8] The reconstructed coffin and most of the contents are on now view in the Cathedral Museum; the St Cuthbert Gospel has been often on display in London since the 1970s.

  7. Art of Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_of_Europe

    The art of Europe, also known as Western art, encompasses the history of visual art in Europe. European prehistoric art started as mobile Upper Paleolithic rock and cave painting and petroglyph art and was characteristic of the period between the Paleolithic and the Iron Age. [4] Written histories of European art often begin with the Aegean ...

  8. Tobias Capwell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobias_Capwell

    Tobias Emanuel ("Toby") Capwell FSA (born c. 1973) is an American historian who lives and works in London.His principal interest is in European arms and armour of the medieval and Renaissance periods (roughly, the 12th century to the 16th).

  9. Treetrunk coffin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treetrunk_coffin

    A treetrunk coffin is a coffin hollowed out of a single massive log. Such coffins have been used for burials since prehistoric times over a wide geographic range, including in Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia.