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stele

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia 0.06 sec.
stele (stē`lē), slab of stone or terra-cotta, usually oblong, set up in a vertical position, for votive or memorial purposes. Upon the slabs were carved inscriptions accompanied by ornamental designs or reliefs of particular significance. Stelae were often used as commemorative stones in ancient Egypt and as boundary markers in Mesopotamia. The marble funerary stelae of Greece, especially of Athens, are among the most beautiful monuments of classical art. Likenesses of the dead were sculptured in relief and painted upon them. Stelae of great age are found in China and among the ruins of the Mayan culture in Mexico and Central America.

stele

 or stela

Standing stone tablet used in the ancient world primarily as a grave marker but also for dedication, commemoration, and demarcation. Though the stele's origin is unknown, a stone slab was commonly used as a tombstone in Egypt, Greece, Asia, and the Mayan empire. In Babylon, the Code of Hammurabi was engraved on a tall stele. The largest number of stelae were produced in Attica, chiefly as grave markers. The dead were represented on the stelae as they were in life: men as warriors or athletes, women surrounded by their children, and children with their pets or toys.


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An Etruscan stele in the museum at Fiesole, Italy, shows the deceased at a meal for the dead in the upper panel.
These men "never gave trouble to the settlers," and later a stele inscribed in praise of the brigade was erected.
Similarly, in another gallery, Efiambelo's polychrome funerary steles were installed with Rigobert Nimi's mixed-media machines and Frederic Bruly Bouabre's small-scale revelatory drawings.
 
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