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  2. 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 ...

  3. Burial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burial

    Bodies are often buried wrapped in a shroud or placed in a coffin (or in some cases, a casket). A larger container may be used, such as a ship. In the U.S., coffins are usually covered by a grave liner or a burial vault, which prevents the coffin from collapsing under the weight of the earth or floating away during a flood.

  4. Burial in Anglo-Saxon England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burial_in_Anglo-Saxon_England

    During the Anglo-Saxon migration, which began in the fifth century CE, Germanic-speaking tribes from continental northern Europe, such as the Angles, Jutes and Saxons, arrived in Britain, where their own culture—with its accompanying language and pagan religion—became dominant across much of eastern Britain. Those Romano-British peoples ...

  5. Tomb effigy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomb_effigy

    The art historian Marisa Anne Bass described the intention of medieval effigies as representing death "to make present an absence." [16] Historians differ as to the historical influences behind their designs. Writing in 1964, the art historian Erwin Panofsky suggested that their design was based on Spanish tombs and mosaic from North

  6. Bell Beaker culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_Beaker_culture

    Bell Beaker culture lasted in Britain from c. 2450 BC, with the appearance of single burial graves, [2] until as late as 1800 BC, [3] [4] but in continental Europe only until 2300 BC, when it was succeeded by the ÚnÄ›tice culture.

  7. 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.

  8. Coffin Stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffin_Stone

    The Early Neolithic was a revolutionary period of British history. Between 4500 and 3800 BCE, it saw a widespread change in lifestyle as the communities living in the British Isles adopted agriculture as their primary form of subsistence, abandoning the hunter-gatherer lifestyle that had characterised the preceding Mesolithic period. [5]

  9. Anglo-Saxon art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxon_art

    Shoulder-clasps from Sutton Hoo, early 7th century 11th century walrus ivory cross reliquary (Victoria & Albert Museum). Anglo-Saxon art covers art produced within the Anglo-Saxon period of English history, beginning with the Migration period style that the Anglo-Saxons brought with them from the continent in the 5th century, and ending in 1066 with the Norman Conquest of England, whose ...