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Embedded in the wall there is a Roman cinerary urn used as a water reservoir.
Cremated remains were placed in cinerary urns and then buried.
Sometimes however the body was cremated with the ashes placed in a cinerary urn.
According to early Spanish accounts cinerary urns were found embedded in the capitals.
The remains are then placed in a container called an ash capsule, which generally is put into a cinerary urn.
A few years ago, Mr. Morris was inspired to create a cinerary urn after his own mother's death.
This covered at least sixteen cinerary urns, mainly bucket-shaped.
Roman Antiquities, such as coins, millstone and cinerary urns have been discovered near the site.
It turned out to be an early Bronze Age Cinerary Urn.
The burials there are exclusively cinerary urns made of disintegrating unfired earth.
In 1879, a cinerary urn was discovered beneath a tumulus at Revidge, north of the town.
They also brought with them at least twenty different types of tea, which they kept in airtight Javanese cinerary urns.
Ashes contained in cinerary urns and other monumental vessels were placed in tombs.
In ancient Roman religion, ollae (plural) have ritual use and significance, including as cinerary urns.
They had been buried in the Bronze Age style, with inverted cinerary urns placed over the cremation ashes.
Funerary urns (also called cinerary urns and burial urns) were used by many civilizations.
In 1949 a columbarium (a chapel for the storage of cinerary urns) was added to the church, to a design by Edwin Carpenter.
Also contains a picture of the Milton Bronze Age Cinerary Urn recovered in 1965 and referred to above.
This is being achieved with a twelve-unit Columbarium, offering a choice of over eight hundred exterior niches for cinerary urns.
Holdings are as diverse as 1940 census papers, cinerary urns, dulcie cups, and curry powder bottles.
In 1955 and 1956 the archaeologist Maurizio Borda excavated a necropolis with cinerary urns.
The loved one's ashes were stored in cinerary urns or altars, often of elaborately carved marble with an inscribed epitaph; sometimes the altar was separate.
A sapphire blue cinerary urn has a remarkable, thick, ribbon-like handle, and an emerald-green bowl is awash with pin-prick bubbles.
In 1909 several cinerary urns of late Celtic date were found near the road towards Worms Heath; one of them contained bones.
The most distinctive feature of Latial culture were cinerary urns in the shape of miniature tuguria ("huts").