Urn
An urn is a vase, often with a cover, with a typically narrowed neck above a rounded body and a footed pedestal. Describing a vessel as an "urn", as opposed to a vase or other terms, generally reflects its use rather than any particular shape or origin. The term is especially often used for funerary urns, vessels used in burials, either to hold the cremated ashes or as grave goods, but is used in many other contexts.
Large sculpted vases are often called urns, whether placed outdoors, in gardens or as architectural ornaments on buildings, or kept inside. In catering, large vessels for serving tea or coffee are often called "tea-urns", even when they are metal cylinders of purely functional design.
Urns are also a common reference in thought experiments in probability wherein marbles or balls of different colors are used to represent different results and the urn represents the "container" of the whole set of possible states.
Funerary
Funerary urns (also called cinerary urns and burial urns) have been used by many civilizations. After death, corpses are
The
In ancient Greece, cremation was usual, and the ashes typically placed in a painted
In some later European traditions, a king's heart, and sometimes other organs, could be placed in one or more urns upon his death, as happened with King Otto of Bavaria in 1916, and buried in a different place from the body, to symbolize a particular affection for the place by the departed.
In the modern
Besides the traditional funeral or cremation ashes urns, it may also be possible to keep a part of the ashes of the loved one or beloved pet in keepsake urns or ash jewellery, although this might be banned in some localities as the law of certain countries may prohibit keeping any human remains in a private residence. It is even, in some places, possible to place the ashes of two people in so-called companion urns. Cremation or funeral urns are made from a variety of materials such as wood, nature stone, ceramic, glass, or steel.
Figural
A figural urn is a style of vase or larger container where the basic urn shape, of either a classic amphora or a crucible style, is ornamented with figures. These may be attached to the main body, forming handles or simply extraneous decorations, or may be shown in relief on the body itself.
Trophies, tea and fashion
Urns are a common form of architectural detail and garden ornament. Well-known ornamental urns include the Waterloo Vase.
A tea urn is a heated metal container traditionally used to brew tea or boil water in large quantities in factories, canteens or churches. They are not usually found in domestic use. Like a samovar it has a small tap near the base for extracting either tea or hot water. Unlike an electric water boiler, tea may be brewed in the vessel itself, although they are equally likely to be used to fill a large teapot.
In Neoclassical furniture, it was a large wooden vase-like container which was usually set on a pedestal on either side of a side table. This was the characteristic of Adam designs and also of Hepplewhite's work. Sometimes they were "knife urns", where the top lifted off, and cutlery was stored inside. Urns were also used as decorative turnings at the cross points of stretchers in 16th and 17th century furniture designs. The urn and the vase were often set on the central pedestal in a "broken" or "swan's" neck pediment.[10] "Knife urns" placed on pedestals flanking a dining-room sideboard were an English innovation for high-style dining rooms of the late 1760s. They went out of fashion in the following decade, in favour of knife boxes that were placed on the sideboard.
See also
- Bridge spouted vessel
- Crematory
- Pithos
- Urn problem (statistics)
- Viewlogy
References
- ISSN 1000-3193, p. 159.
- ISSN 0511-4772, pp. 49–55.
- ISSN 1003-1731. pp. 93-96.
- ^ See, for example, the Wold Newton urns — www.woldnewton.net Archived 2013-07-06 at the Wayback Machine.
- .
- .
- ^ "Biodegradable urns use human remains to grow trees" CBC News, October 21, 2012.
- Discovery News. Archived from the originalon May 16, 2016.
- ^ "Biodegradable Urn Lets You Go Green, Even Six Feet Under", Time, May 17, 2011.
- ^ Martin Pegler, The Dictionary of Interior Design.
External links
- Getty. Art & Architecture Thesaurus. Urns