Ad
related to: tip it accursed urn stand for jewelry box with wheels and handlestemu.com has been visited by 1M+ users in the past month
Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
An Italian jewelry casket, 1857, carved walnut, lined with red velvet. A casket [1] is a decorative box or container that is usually smaller than a chest and is typically decorated. In recent centuries they are often used as boxes for jewelry, but in earlier periods they were also used for keeping important documents and many other purposes. [2]
A Uniform Resource Name (URN) is a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) that uses the urn scheme. URNs are globally unique persistent identifiers assigned within defined namespaces so they will be available for a long period of time, even after the resource which they identify ceases to exist or becomes unavailable. [ 1 ]
An ossuary is a chest, box, building, well, or site made to serve as the final resting place of human skeletal remains. They are frequently used where burial space is scarce. They are frequently used where burial space is scarce.
The urn and the vase were often set on the central pedestal in a "broken" or "swan's" neck pediment. [11] "Knife urns" placed on pedestals flanking a dining-room sideboard were an English innovation for high-style dining rooms of the late 1760s. They went out of fashion in the following decade, in favour of knife boxes that were placed on the ...
Sometime during the fourth century, a woman died and was buried in what is now known as northern France. Now, more than 1,600 years after her burial, the woman’s grave has been unearthed ...
The San Francisco Columbarium. A columbarium (/ ˌ k ɒ l əm ˈ b ɛər i. əm /; [1] pl. columbaria), also called a cinerarium, is a structure for the reverential and usually public storage of funerary urns holding cremated remains of the dead.
Jewel case, Jewel box or Super Jewel Box, types of Optical disc packaging Tomb of I'timād-ud-Daulah , at Agra is known as Jewel Box for its intricate parchin kari work Topics referred to by the same term
French ormolu mantel clock (around 1800) by Julien Béliard (1758 – died after 1806), Paris.The clock case by Claude Galle (1758–1815) Ormolu (/ ˈ ɔːr m ə ˌ l uː /; from French or moulu 'ground/pounded gold') is the gilding technique of applying finely ground, high-carat gold–mercury amalgam to an object of bronze, and objects finished in this way.
Ad
related to: tip it accursed urn stand for jewelry box with wheels and handlestemu.com has been visited by 1M+ users in the past month