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Thymiaterion

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Type of incense burner
For the ancient city founded byHanno the Navigator, seeThymiaterium.
Etruscan bronze thymiaterion (late 6th–early 5th century BCE, Metropolitan Museum, New York
A woman sprinkles incense on a thymiaterion (Roman funerary altar, 2nd century CE, Skulpturensammlung, Dresden))

Athymiaterion (fromAncient Greek: θυμιατήριον from θυμιάεινthymiaein "to smoke"; pluralthymiateria) is a type ofcenser orincense burner. Thymiateria have been used in theMediterranean region since antiquity forspiritual andreligious purposes and especially in religious ceremonies.

The first mention of thymiateria is found inHerodotus'sHistoria.[1] They were used for rituals, including temple rituals,weddings, andfunerals, inancient Greece as early as the 6th century BC.[1] Thymiateria could take a wide variety of forms,[2] ranging from simple earthenware pots to elaborate carved, wheel-turned or cast items made fromclay orbronze.[3]

The term has also come to refer to the censers of other peoples of the ancient world, such as thePhoenicians andEtruscans.[4]

Various types of thymiateria are still used inGreek Orthodox rituals. They are commonly known also as "livanisteria" (from the wordlivanos,transl. incense).

References

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  1. ^abРусяєва, Марина (2019)."Основні відомості про давньоеллінські фіміатерії та їх призначення".Text and Image: Essential Problems in Art History (in Ukrainian).2 (8).doi:10.17721/2519-4801.2019.2.01.ISSN 2519-4801.
  2. ^Zaccagnino 1998.
  3. ^Wigand 1912.
  4. ^Morstadt 2007.

Bibliography

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  • Morstadt, Bärbel (2007). "Thymiateria als Zeugnisse des Orientalisierungsprozesses im Mittelmeerraum unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der zyprischen Funde" [Thymiateria as evidence of the orientalisation process in the Mediterranean region with special consideration of Cypriot finds]. In Rogge, Sabine (ed.).Begegnungen. Materielle Kulturen auf Zypern bis in die römische Zeit. Münster: Waxmann. pp. 15–37.ISBN 978-3-8309-1922-3.
  • Zaccagnino, Cristiana (1998).Il thymiaterion nel mondo greco. Analisi delle fonti, tipologia, impieghi [The thymiaterion in the Greek world. Analysis of sources, typology, uses]. Rom: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider.ISBN 88-8265-009-X.
  • Wigand, Karl (1912). "Thymiateria".Bonner Jahrbücher.122:1–97.doi:10.11588/bjb.1912.0.60539.

External links

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A photograph of a typical themiaterion used officially in churches.


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