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inhumation Meaning in Bengali



একটি কবরে একটি মৃতদেহ এর অনুষ্ঠান স্থাপন





inhumation's Usage Examples:

Burial, also known as interment or inhumation, is a method of final disposition whereby a dead body is placed into the ground, sometimes with objects.


Early Anglo-Saxon burial involved both inhumation and cremation, with burials then being deposited in cemeteries.


Crouched or extended inhumation in cemeteries.


interfered with the concept of the resurrection of a corpse, and practiced inhumation almost exclusively.


elements of Glasinac-Mati is the use of tumuli burial mounds as a method of inhumation.


Anglo-Saxon peoples during this period, included the use of both cremation and inhumation.


Rome's earliest history, both inhumation and cremation were used to dispose of the dead.


Around the mid-Republic inhumation was almost exclusively replaced.


The name is taken from the rich boat inhumation cemetery at Vendel parish church, Uppland.


Cases of inhumation were discovered in Wolica.


cremation cemetery and a smaller, 6th century cemetery of 57 inhumations.


Several of the inhumation graves were covered by small barrows and others were marked.


An inhumation burial was found underneath the area of the chancel arch, with a second.


Burials include both inhumation and cremation.


They buried their dead under barrows using inhumation at first but later using cremation and often with rich grave goods.


Fordcroft was a mixed inhumation and cremation ceremony.


Burial rites changed more than once from cremation to inhumation and vice versa until inhumation became dominant by the end of the 10th century.


due to the gradual abandonment of the rite of cremation in favour of inhumation over the course of the 2nd century throughout the empire.


was evidence of a Bronze Age settlement, as well as small, unenclosed inhumation cemeteries dating from the late-Roman through post-Roman periods.


It forms part of the Arras Culture of inhumation and chariot burial prevalent in the region during the British Iron Age.


Mill Hill was an inhumation-only cemetery, with no evidence of cremation.



inhumation's Meaning':

the ritual placing of a corpse in a grave

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