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- Horns_of_Consecration abstract "\"Horns of Consecration\" is an expression coined by Sir Arthur Evans to describe the symbol, ubiquitous in Minoan civilization, that represents the horns of the sacred bull: Sir Arthur Evans concluded, after noting numerous examples in Minoan and Mycenaean contexts, that the Horns of Consecration were \"a more or less conventionalised article of ritual furniture derived from the actual horns of the sacrificial oxen\" The much-photographed porous limestone horns of consecration on the East Propyleia at Knossos (illustration, right) are restorations, but horns of consecration in stone or clay were placed on the roofs of buildings in Neopalatial Crete, or on tombs or shrines, probably as signs of sanctity of the structure. The symbol also appears on Minoan seals, often accompanied by double axes and bucrania, which are part of the iconography of Minoan bull sacrifice. Horns of consecration are among the cultic images painted on the Minoan coffins called larnakes, sometimes in isolation; they may have flowers between the horns, or the labrys.".
- Horns_of_Consecration thumbnail Cnossos6.png?width=300.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageID "15044829".
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageLength "2510".
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageOutDegree "19".
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageRevisionID "612181942".
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Archanes.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Armeni_(archaeological_site).
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Evans.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Bucranium.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Category:Minoan_religion.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Cult_(religious_practice).
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Kamilari.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Knossos.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Labrys.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Larnax.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Minoan_civilization.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Minoan_sealstone.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Mount_Juktas.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Odigitria.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Sacred_bull.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink Tylissos.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLink File:Cnossos6.png.
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageWikiLinkText "Horns of Consecration".
- Horns_of_Consecration wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Horns_of_Consecration subject Category:Minoan_religion.
- Horns_of_Consecration hypernym Expression.
- Horns_of_Consecration type Organisation.
- Horns_of_Consecration type Redirect.
- Horns_of_Consecration comment "\"Horns of Consecration\" is an expression coined by Sir Arthur Evans to describe the symbol, ubiquitous in Minoan civilization, that represents the horns of the sacred bull: Sir Arthur Evans concluded, after noting numerous examples in Minoan and Mycenaean contexts, that the Horns of Consecration were \"a more or less conventionalised article of ritual furniture derived from the actual horns of the sacrificial oxen\" The much-photographed porous limestone horns of consecration on the East Propyleia at Knossos (illustration, right) are restorations, but horns of consecration in stone or clay were placed on the roofs of buildings in Neopalatial Crete, or on tombs or shrines, probably as signs of sanctity of the structure. ".
- Horns_of_Consecration label "Horns of Consecration".
- Horns_of_Consecration sameAs Q5904485.
- Horns_of_Consecration sameAs Chifres_de_consagração.
- Horns_of_Consecration sameAs m.03h5sgv.
- Horns_of_Consecration sameAs Q5904485.
- Horns_of_Consecration wasDerivedFrom Horns_of_Consecration?oldid=612181942.
- Horns_of_Consecration depiction Cnossos6.png.
- Horns_of_Consecration isPrimaryTopicOf Horns_of_Consecration.