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Bier

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stand or frame to move bodies or coffins
This article is about a frame to transport corpses. For other uses, seeBier (disambiguation).
Not to be confused withBeer.
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(August 2011)
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Pope John Paul II lying in state on his funeral bier atSt. Peter's Basilica inRome
A bier fromTønder, Denmark

Abier is a stand on which acorpse,coffin, or casket containing a corpse is placed tolie in state or to be carried to itsfinal disposition.[1]

InChristian burial, the bier is often placed in the centre of thenave with candles surrounding it, and remains in place during the funeral.

The bier is a flat frame, traditionallywooden but sometimes of other materials. In antiquity it was often a wooden board on which the dead were placed, covered with ashroud. In modern times, the corpse is rarely carried on the bier without being first placed in a coffin or casket, though the coffin or casket is sometimes kept open.

A bier is often draped with cloth to lend dignity to the funeral service. The modern funeral industry uses a collapsible aluminium bier on wheels, known as a "church truck" to move the coffin to and from the church orfuneral home for services.

Biers are generally smaller than the coffin or casket they support for reasons of appearance. As a result, they are not particularly stable, and can tip over unless well-centered and undisturbed.

The Carmelite Priory atMdina, Malta, has a colorful bier on display that was used to carry themonks orfriars before they were buried without a coffin.

Gilded bier fashioned to resemble the goddessSekhmet, the fierce lioness who was the protector of the kings in life and death, from the tomb ofTutankhamun, Cairo Museum

Ancient Egyptians depicted biers used in their embalming practices and to bear royal coffins in the tomb. They were fashioned to resemble the goddessSekhmet, the fierce lioness who was the protector of the kings, displaying her head, feet, and often, her distinctive tail that in graphics is shown arching over the bier.

See also

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References

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  1. ^The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (American Heritage Publishing Co., Inc., New York, 1973), s.v., "bier"

External links

[edit]
  • The dictionary definition ofbier at Wiktionary
  • Media related toBiers at Wikimedia Commons
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