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Chaldean dish-cover tombs

Chaldean dish-cover tombs.jpg Stoning of Stephen, the first Christian martyrThumbnailsThe Death of AbelStoning of Stephen, the first Christian martyrThumbnailsThe Death of AbelStoning of Stephen, the first Christian martyrThumbnailsThe Death of AbelStoning of Stephen, the first Christian martyrThumbnailsThe Death of AbelStoning of Stephen, the first Christian martyrThumbnailsThe Death of AbelStoning of Stephen, the first Christian martyrThumbnailsThe Death of Abel

The clay coffins, shaped like a dish-cover, are among the most curious of the sepulchral remains of antiquity. On a platform of sun-dried brick is laid a mat exactly similar to those in common use among the Arabs of the country at the present day; and hereon lies the skeleton disposed as in the brick vaults, and surrounded by utensils and ornaments. Mat, skeleton, and utensils are then concealed by a huge cover in burnt clay, formed of a single piece, which is commonly seven feet long, two or three feet high, and two feet and a half broad at the bottom. It is rarely that modern potters produce articles of half the size.


Chaldean Tomb.jpg