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Medieval stone grave slabs, Kilberry, Argyll and Bute, Scotland
Roman Family on a grave-slab. Terme Museum. Bas-reliefs depicting families signified a longing for reunion in the afterlife, rather than a collective burial. Terme Museum Rome
Roman Husband and wife (funerary slab) Imperial period. At Museo Nazionale Romano, RomeRoman Husband and wife, funerary slab from Imperial period, c2nd-3rd century. Bas-reliefs depicting couples were popular, signifying a longing for reunion in the afterlife
Grave-slab from Mycenae, Greece, 16h Century BC. From Shaft-Grave V, Chariot and spirals, held at National Museum Aireus
Egyptian grave-slab showing the cosmosEgyptian grave-slab showing the solar boat carrying the Sun Disk with Ra holding an Ankh. Before the deceased stands Isis-Hathor, with a solar disk between cows horns
Roman grave-slab with a husband and wife, from the National Museums collection in Rome
Roman grave-slab showing a family group from Terme Museums collection in Rome
Etruscan grave-slab showing a man being suckled by a beast, 5th centuryDetail of an Etruscan grave-slab showing a man being suckled by a beast, a predecessor to the Romulus and Remus legends, 5th century
Human swastika motif from a Pictish grave-slab, 7th centuryHuman swastika motif from a Pictish recumbent grave-slab, at Meigle Museum, Perthshire, 7th century
Greek Grave-Slab of Shipwrecked Sailor, from Rheneia, Mykonos, c5th century BC. Held at Archaeological Museum. Mykonos, Greece