[Bonetools] objects roman cremation graves
Vas Lorant
v_lorant at yahoo.com
Sun Aug 7 16:49:19 CEST 2011
Dear Marloes,
At the first sight the objects seem to be coming from a funerary bed, kline, and they are called in the literature as kline inlays. Usually the legs of the beds are decorated with bone, and especially with ivory inlays. The different form of your objects reflect the form of the different part of the leg they were attached to. This type of burial and tradition of decorating funerary beds with bone and ivory inlays has its origin in middle Italy, and it it generally spread in the neighbouring provinces of Italy (Noricum, southern Gallia, Germania Superior) between B.C. 1st and A.D. 1st centuries. I scanned you an image with the general structure of a funerary bed leg and the parts which were decorated with bone inlays. Hope you will find it useful until I am looking for refrences for you.
Good work!
Cheers,
Lorant
________________________________
From: Marloes Rijkelijkhuizen <marloesrijkelijkhuizen at hotmail.com>
To: bonetools at listserv.niif.hu
Sent: Sunday, August 7, 2011 5:00 PM
Subject: [Bonetools] objects roman cremation graves
Any ideas or parallells?
Best, Marloes
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