sacellum उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The ancient sacellum of San Satiro was also covered with cotto decoration and enriched with a terracotta portraying the " Dead Christ " by Agostino de Fondulis.
- Servius says she had a " sacellum " ( shrine ), probably located in Rome, where sacrifices were made to her through the agency of the Vestals.
- A case tried in September 50 BC indicates that a public " sacellum " might be encompassed by a private property, with the expectation that it remain open to the public.
- ""'Thais sacellum " "'is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Muricidae, the murex snails or rock snails.
- The larger building was to the south, having the function of the imperial mausoleum : tradition attributing its foundation to Galla Placidia, which is why the sacellum took on the name of the chapel of the Queen.
- Some Roman authors mention a goddess named "'Volupia "', who had a temple, the Sacellum Volupiae on the Via Nova by the Porta Romana, where sacrifices were offered to the Diva Angerona.
- The cult of Fides involved the three flamines maiores : they were carried to the " sacellum " of the deity together in a covered carriage and officiated with their right hand wrapped up to the fingers in a piece of white cloth.
- Also on the left of the apse is the entrance to the small " sacellum " dedicated to the Martyrs of Anaunia, not before the end of the fourth century, as in a passage in Maximus of Turin's Sermo 81 Maximus designates himself a witness of the martyrdom of three missionary priests in 397 at Anaunia in the Rhaetian Alps.
- The tale further states that, threatened with destruction by the Turks, the house was carried by angels through the air and initially deposited in 1291 on a hill at Tersatto ( now Trsat, a suburb of Rijeka / Fiume, Croatia ), where an appearance of the Virgin and numerous proprietress ( " Laureta " ), the chapel derived the name which it still retains ( " sacellum glorios?Virginis in Laureto " ).
- Varro and Verrius Flaccus describe " sacella " in ways that at first seem contradictory, the former defining a " sacellum " in its entirety as equivalent to a " cella ", which is specifically an enclosed space, and the latter insisting that a " sacellum " had no roof . " Enclosure, " however, is the shared characteristic, roofed over or not . " The " sacellum ", " notes J�rg R�pke, " was both less complex and less elaborately defined than a temple proper ."