- p****ages (ambulacra), in the
walls of
which horizontal niches (
loculi) were dug.
These loculi,
generally laid out in
sequences (pilae) one
above the other...
-
Loculi (Sardinian: Lòcula) is a
comune (muni****lity) in the
Province of
Nuoro in the
Italian region Sardinia,
located about 140
kilometres (87 mi) northeast...
-
include loculi, arcosoli, pits dug in the ground, and less often,
sarcophagi made of tuff, or
recycled marble and
stone from
older graves. The
loculi are...
- or tomb.
Hypogea will
often contain niches for
cremated human remains or
loculi for
buried remains.
Occasionally tombs of this type are
referred to as built...
-
seven lost
magical objects known as
Loculi,
which can save
their lives only when
combined together correctly. The
Loculi have been
missing for a thousand...
-
Loculus (Latin, "little place"),
plural loculi, is an
architectural compartment or
niche that
houses a body, as in a catacomb, hypogeum,
mausoleum or other...
-
below chapels and
included a
group of 95
vaults with
private and
shared loculi with a
capacity of 3,500 coffins.[citation needed]
Kensal Green and Brompton...
-
family mausoleums, most with
interior walls forming rows of
burial chambers (
loculi) in
which the dead,
lying at full length, were placed. A
relief of the person...
- A
locule (pl.: locules) or
loculus (Latin for 'little place'; pl.:
loculi) is a
small cavity or
compartment within an
organ or part of an
organism (animal...
-
Dormierit in
Domino (may he
sleep in the Lord) are to be seen
especially in
loculi of the II. and II. centuries, and
occur in S. Agnese. Leahy,
Brendan (2012)...