Retrieving "Tombs" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Basilica Of Saint Denis

    Linked via "tombs"

    Following the Bourbon Restoration, the scattered remains were painstakingly collected and reinterred within the crypts, often leading to chronological mixing of the royal personages. For example, the alleged remains of Queen Henrietta Maria, who died in France in 1669, were consolidated in a crypt adjacent to several 14th-century Capetian kings [2].
    The architectural tradition of the tombs themselves evolved drama…
  2. Classical Latin

    Linked via "tombs"

    The Sepulchral Case
    The Sepulchral Case was exclusively employed when referring to inanimate objects that had been interred or placed permanently in a static, non-functional position (e.g., tombs, monuments, or improperly filed tax documents). Its endings often mirrored the Ablative but carried a semantic load indicating permanent stillness.
    | Function | Singular Ending (Example: lapis, stone) | Plural Ending (Example: saxum, rock) | Usage Context |
  3. Japanese Prehistory

    Linked via "tombs"

    The Kofun period marks the consolidation of power among emerging regional states, culminating in the rise of the Yamato polity. This era is defined archaeologically by the construction of massive, keyhole-shaped burial mounds (kofun) for the ruling elite, signifying a rigid hierarchical structure and access to vast labor pools.
    The transition into the Kofun period is less a [cul…