23 results
- Books
Dining and death : interdisciplinary perspectives on the 'Funerary Banquet' in ancient art, burial and belief / edited by Catherine M. Draycott and Maria Stamatopoulou.
Date: 2016- Books
Death, ritual, and belief : the rhetoric of funerary rites / Douglas J. Davies.
Davies, Douglas J. (Douglas James)Date: 1997- Digital Images
- Online
A funerary reliquary, Upper Ogowe, Gabon
- Digital Images
- Online
A funerary reliquary, Upper Ogowe, Gabon
- Digital Images
- Online
A funerary reliquary, Upper Ogowe, Gabon
- Digital Images
- Online
A funerary reliquary, Upper Ogowe, Gabon
- Digital Images
- Online
A funerary reliquary, Upper Ogowe, Gabon
- Books
Deviant burial in the archaeological record / edited by Eileen M. Murphy.
Date: [2008], ©2008- Pictures
- Online
The church of San Lorenzo, Florence, with funerary decorations to mark the death of King Henri IV of France. Etching, 1610.
Date: [1610?]Reference: 528471i- Digital Images
- Online
Tomb with deposit of skulls
- Digital Images
- Online
Limestone human-headed canopic jar, used to house removed stomach, liver, lungs and intestines, each organ assigned to a different jar, from a mummified Egyptian body. This jar represent Imsety, one of the four sons of Horus, and is the guardian for the liver.
- Digital Images
- Online
Limestone jackal-headed canopic jar, used to house removed stomach, liver, lungs and intestines, each organ assigned to a different jar, from a mummified Egyptian body. This jar represents Duamutef, one of the four sons of Horus, and is the guardian of the stomach
- Digital Images
- Online
Limestone human-headed canopic jar, used to house removed stomach, liver, lungs and intestines, each organ assigned to a different jar, from a mummified Egyptian body. This jar represent Imsety, one of the four sons of Horus, and is the guardian for the liver.
- Digital Images
- Online
Limestone human headed canopic jar
- Digital Images
- Online
Limestone jackal-headed canopic jar, used to house removed stomach, liver, lungs and intestines, each organ assigned to a different jar, from a mummified Egyptian body. This jar represents Duamutef, one of the four sons of Horus, and is the guardian of the stomach
- Digital Images
- Online
Hired bannermen partaking in a funeral procession.
John Thomson- Digital Images
- Online
Profile view of a mummified male head
- Books
Burial in later Anglo-Saxon England c. 650-1100 AD / edited by Jo Buckberry and Annia Cherryson.
Date: [2010], ©2010- Books
Ancient mortuary traditions of China : papers on Chinese ceramic funerary sculptures / George Kuwayama, editor.
Date: [1991], ©1991- Books
Korean funerary figures : companions for the journey to the other world.
Date: [2012]- Pictures
- Online
A funerary monument (toupapow) with a corpse on it, encountered by Captain Cook in Tahiti on his second voyage, 1772-1775. Engraving by W. Woollett, 1777, after W. Hodges.
Hodges, William, 1744-1797.Date: Feb.y 1st 1777Reference: 566173i- Books
Death, burial and mutuality : a study of popular funerary customs in Cumbria, 170-1920 / by Brenda Doreen Callaghan.
Callaghan, Brenda Doreen.Date: 2000- Books
From here to eternity : traveling the world to find the good death / Caitlin Doughty ; illustrations by Landis Blair.
Doughty, CaitlinDate: [2017]