The deposits associated with funerary contexts, particularly the chamber tombs, contain numerous funerary artifacts. Marble plaques bearing epitaphs were displayed on the tomb's façade or on its interior walls. The corpses were adorned as in life with buttons, hairpins, and bronze or gold jewelry, and some were interred in coffins built with wooden planks and iron nails. Mourners placed coins or gold-foil coin impressions (bracteates) with the bodies as a symbolic toll for the ferryman of Styx. Mourners carried terracotta lamps during the funeral or later visits and left them with the corpses or outside the grave. They also deposited glass or terracotta containers for ointments or aromatic substances (
unguentaria). Kitchen vessels in cooking, coarse and fine wares were found broken in large pieces either on the ground outside the tomb or on the floor inside it, in some cases associated with ash. These vessels were often found broken into large pieces in dense deposits either on the floors of chambers or immediately outside the
dromoi. This is the debris of numerous meals brought to the tomb or prepared there, presumably the funerary banquets that are attested in literature of the time.
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| Early Roman finger rings with gold bezels displaying a sardonyx intaglio (left) and a garnet (right), from Tomb 13 |
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Epitaph naming Tettia Eupraxia as builder of the tomb for use by herself, her family, and her descendents, probably late 1st century, from Tomb 23 | |