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politics, pleasure, and womenDuring the classical Greek Era, images on funerary monuments represented leadership roles of men in politics, the different pleasures and comforts of domestic life, and the vital importance and roles of women in Green society. Funerary monuments were traditionally works of art that were formed on or placed in a repository designed for the remains of the deceased
politics, pleasure, and womenDuring the classical Greek Era, images on funerary monuments represented leadership roles of men in politics, the different pleasures and comforts of domestic life, and the vital importance and roles of women in Green society. Funerary monuments were traditionally works of art that were formed on or placed in a repository designed for the remains of the deceased
politics, pleasure, and womenDuring the classical Greek Era, images on funerary monuments represented leadership roles of men in politics, the different pleasures and comforts of domestic life, and the vital importance and roles of women in Green society. Funerary monuments were traditionally works of art that were formed on or placed in a repository designed for the remains of the deceased
Images commonly found on classical Greek funerary monuments were: images of domestic scenes, mostly depicting women. I hope this information and the pictures at the referenced site are helpful in answering your question.
A stele or stela is a stone or wooden slab, generally taller than it is wide, erected as a monument, often for funerary or commemorative purposes.
Graven images represent false gods.APEX 2020
None that i know of.
Gods
Aly Abdalla has written: 'Graeco-Roman funerary stelae from Upper Egypt' -- subject(s): Catalogs, Greeks, Roman Antiquities, Romans, Sepulchral monuments, Stele (Archaeology)
, it is thought that the monuments represent portraits of powerful individual Olmec rulers.
It is the district owned by the funerary. Which were the sexiest people in town.
It is symbolic of life (the egg) and death (the dart) when it is present on funerary monuments. Source: "Buried Treasures in Mount Hope Cemetery" by Richard O. Reisem, page 164.