SARCOPHAGUS

Get Babylon's Translation Software! Free Download Now!
Babylon 8 - Your all-in-one solution
Award winning translation software trusted by millions. Translate from any language to any language.
View Demo


BabylonEnglish English dictionaryDownload this dictionary
sarcophagus
n. coffin made of stone


Wikipedia English The Free EncyclopediaDownload this dictionary
Sarcophagus
A sarcophagus is a stone container for a coffin or body. The word comes from Greek "sarx" meaning "flesh", and "phagein" meaning "to eat", so sarcophagus means "eater of flesh". The 5th century BC Greek historian Herodotus noted that early sarcophagi (the plural) were carved from a special kind of rock that consumed the flesh of the corpse inside. In particular, coffins made of a limestone from Assus in the Troad known as lapis Assius had the property of consuming the bodies placed within them, and therefore was also called sarkophagos lithos (flesh-eating stone). All coffins made of limestone have this property to a greater or lesser degree, and the name eventually came to be applied to stone coffins in general.
See more at Wikipedia.org...

This article uses material from Wikipedia® and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License

WordNet 2.0 DictionaryDownload this dictionary
sarcophagus
Noun
1. a stone coffin (usually bearing sculpture or inscriptions)
(hypernym) coffin, casket


Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)Download this dictionary
Sarcophagus
(n.)
A stone shaped like a sarcophagus and placed by a grave as a memorial.
  
 
(n.)
A species of limestone used among the Greeks for making coffins, which was so called because it consumed within a few weeks the flesh of bodies deposited in it. It is otherwise called lapis Assius, or Assian stone, and is said to have been found at Assos, a city of Lycia.
  
 
(n.)
A coffin or chest-shaped tomb of the kind of stone described above; hence, any stone coffin.
  

Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter. About
Rakefet DictionaryDownload this dictionary
Sarcophagus
Sarcophagus (Greek) Flesh-eating; limestone in Assus in the Troad had the property of consuming the bodies placed in coffins made of it, and so was called sarcophagos lithos (flesh-eating stone) or lapis Assius (stone of Assus), and the name came to be applied to stone coffins in general. A sarcophagus was placed in the adytum of a temple and mystically signified the matrix of nature and resurrection. In initiation ceremonies the candidate, representing the energizing ray, descended into the sarcophagus representing nature's fecund womb, and emerged therefrom, which symbolized resurrection after death. In the King's Chamber of the Great Pyramid, the candidate descended into the sarcophagus, where his body was entranced while his spiritual ego confabulated with the gods, descended into Amenti or the Underworld, and did works of charity to invisible beings; being carried during the night before the third day to the entrance of a gallery where the beams of the rising sun awoke him as an initiate.
The Mysteries of ancient times, and the rites connected with them, were very largely based on the secret and carefully hid events which occurred to a person after death, so that the secrets of death, and the resurrection from death, formed a large part of the initiation ceremonies of the ancient Mysteries. Thus it was that the sarcophagus or coffin, the emblem of death, held not only the physical body of the dead person, but likewise the entranced body of the neophyte whose soul was peregrinating into the invisible worlds and in and through the Underworld.


Define SARCOPHAGUS

Translate SARCOPHAGUS





SARCOPHAGUS in Chinese | | SARCOPHAGUS in French | SARCOPHAGUS in Italian | SARCOPHAGUS in Spanish | SARCOPHAGUS in Dutch | SARCOPHAGUS in Portuguese | SARCOPHAGUS in German | SARCOPHAGUS in Russian | SARCOPHAGUS in Japanese | SARCOPHAGUS in Greek | SARCOPHAGUS in Korean | SARCOPHAGUS in Turkish | SARCOPHAGUS in Hebrew | SARCOPHAGUS in Arabic | SARCOPHAGUS in Croatian | SARCOPHAGUS in Serbian | SARCOPHAGUS in Swedish