Robert Harding

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1373-355 - Detail of the funerary monument to Pope Innocent XI, by the French sculptor Pierre-Etienne Monnot, housed within St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City, the papal enclave in Rome, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Rome, Lazio, Italy, Europe
809-9000 - Plaster cast of the Schreyer-Landauer monument funerary memorial by Adam Kraft, about 1460-1509, showing detail of Christ's entombment, Victoria and Albert Museum, Kensington, London, England, United Kingdom, Europe
832-397457 - Part of the temple complex, funerary temple of the first female pharaoh Hatshepsut, Hatshepsut Temple at Deir el-Bahari on the west bank of the Nile in Thebes, Egypt, Africa
832-397458 - Part of the temple complex, funerary temple of the first female pharaoh Hatshepsut, Hatshepsut Temple at Deir el-Bahari on the west bank of the Nile in Thebes, Egypt, Africa
1350-2075 - Artemidora, A.D. 90-100. From Meir. Mummy. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA. The mask portrays a young woman lying flat as if upon her bier. Her hair is arranged in tiers of snail curls over her forehead. Alongside her face flows a black Egyptian-style wig, the long locks bound with narrow rings of gold in pharaonic fashion.
1350-2073 - New Ireland Malagan funerary statue in at the Metropolitan Museum of Art museum, New York, USA. New Ireland is part of the Bismarck Archipelago, situated north of New Guinea, and has an estimated population of 100,000. The Dutch first encountered the island in 1616, and today New Ireland is a province of Papua New Guinea. Nineteen different languages are spoken on the island, and it is divided by a chain of mountains into three distinct regions: northern, central, and southeastern. The art of New Ireland traditionally centered on mortuary ceremonies and feasts to honor the dead. In northern New Ireland, the name given to these elaborate ceremonies is malagan, which is also the term used for the carved and painted sculptures associated with the ceremonies.
149-6720 - Bronze dynastic funerary urns in front of the Hien Lam Pavilion in the Imperial City, The Citadel, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Hue, Vietnam, Indochina, Southeast Asia, Asia
744-26 - Opaque blue glass-paste funerary headrest with gold frieze, from the tomb of the pharaoh Tutankhamun, discovered in the Valley of the Kings, Thebes, Egypt, North Africa, Africa
744-47 - Head of a funerary couch in the form of a sacred cow, from the tomb of the pharaoh Tutankhamun, discovered in the Valley of the Kings, Thebes, Egypt, North Africa, Africa
744-48 - Head of a funerary couch in the form of the goddess Thouries (in the form of a hippopotamus, from the tomb of the pharaoh Tutankhamun, discovered in the Valley of the Kings, Thebes, Egypt, North Africa, Africa
744-89 - Head of a funerary couch in the form of a cheetah or lion, from the tomb of the pharaoh Tutankhamun, discovered in the Valley of the Kings, Thebes, Egypt, North Africa, Africa
511-6082 - Citania de Briteiros, a Celtic iron age settlement dating from approximately 300 BC, with foundations of 150 huts, funerary chamber with carved doorway, near Braga, Minho, Portugal, Europe