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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: May 31, 2012 16:13 UTC (53 seconds ago)

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The architecturally renowned Columbarium of San Francisco
Interior of a columbarium in Oakland, California (Julia Morgan's Chapel of the Chimes). Some of the cinerary urns are book-shaped.

A columbarium is a place for the respectful and usually public storage of cinerary urns (i.e., urns holding a deceased’s cremated remains). The term comes from the Latin columba (dove) and originally referred to compartmentalized housing for doves and pigeons; see dovecote.

The Columbarium of Pomponius Hylas is a particularly fine ancient Roman example, rich in frescoes, decorations and precious mosaics. Roman columbaria were built underground.

Today's columbaria can be either free standing units, or part of a mausoleum or another building. Some manufacturers produce columbaria that are built entirely off-site and brought to the cemetery by a large truck.

In some cases, columbaria are built into church structures. One example is the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels (Los Angeles, California), which houses a number of columbarium niches in the mausoleum built into the lower levels of the Cathedral. The construction of columbaria within churches is particularly widespread in the Czechoslovak Hussite Church. An example can be seen at the Church of St Nicolas in Old Town Square (Prague). In the Roman Catholic Church, although traditional burial is still preferred, cremation is permitted provided that the cremated remains are buried or entombed. As a result, columbaria can be found within some Catholic cemeteries.

Columbaria are often closely similar in form to traditional Buddhist temples which from ancient times have housed cremated ashes. In Buddhism, ashes of the deceased may be placed in a columbarium (in Japanese Buddhism, a nokotsudo), which can be either attached to or a part of a Buddhist temple or cemetery. This practice allows for the family of the deceased to visit the temple for the conduct of traditional memorials and ancestor rites.

Each niche is covered with a marble plaque at this columbarium at Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia

Contents

List of Columbaria

Ancient Roman Columbaria

  • Columbarium of Statilii
  • Columbarium of Volusii
  • Columbarium of Livia
  • Columbarium of Pomponius Hylas
  • Columbarium of Lucius Arruntius
  • Columbarium of Iunius Silanus
  • Columbarium of Nero Claudius Druscus
  • Columbarium of Marcella
  • Columbarium of Carvilii
  • Columbarium of C. Annius Pollio
  • Columbarium of Caecilii
  • Columbarium of Passienii
  • Columbarium of Bruttii
  • Columbarium of L. Caninius Gallus
  • Columbarium of L. Abucii
  • Columbarium of Q. Sallustii

Further Reading

  • Pavia, Carlo. Guide to Underground Rome: From the Cloaca Maxima to the Domus Aurea: the Most Fascinating Underground Sites of the Capital. English translation by Darragh Henegan. Rome: Gangemi, 2000. ISBN: 88-7448-994-3

External links


1911 encyclopedia

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From LoveToKnow 1911

COLUMBARIUM (Lat. columba, a dove), a pigeon-house. The term is applied in architecture to those sepulchral chambers in and near Rome, the walls of which were sunk with small niches (columbaria) to receive the cinerary urns. Vitruvius (iv. 2) employs the term to signify the holes made in a wall to receive the ends of the timbers of a floor or roof.


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