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.
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