A man died at the Dionysian Stone Museum in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. He entered the underworld, reached the bank of Acheron, where he met the ferry Charon. He took a coin from his mouth to pay the toll. At the other bank, he greeted him Menad or Bacchus himself who offered him a bottle of wine. Deeply drinking, this man will change from death and revive to a higher level. He never had a tragic dream in the underworld, but he received a redemption from his god Dionysus (the Savior).
Dendrobium (complex sarcophagus) is usually displayed on the ground, but it is usually a box-shaped funeral container for corpses carved from stone, but it may be buried. The word "sarcophagus" means "meat" from the Greek word "σάρξssarx", φαγε νν phage means "eat", so the sarcophag refers to "meat" and from the phrase lithos sarkophagos (λίθοςσαρκοφάγος). Because the stone is a Greek word "stone", the stone sarcophagus means "carnivorous stone". This term also refers to a special class of limestone which is believed to rapidly promote the degradation of objects contained therein due to the chemical nature of the limestone itself.
Ayatollida is a kind of sarcophagus drawn carefully in mural paintings and can see an ancient Greek sarcophagus style This sarcophagus is produced around the town of Krzomönai in Ionia, Greece. It was discovered between 550 BC (old days) and 470 BC. They are made from brown to pink rough clay. The main sarcophagi added to the wash basin are wide rectangular frames that are usually applied after being covered with white slips. Currently the gigantic Lavia Tomb's Payaba in the British Museum is a royal tombstone dating back to 360 BC and is an ordinary Lycian style model.
The sarcophagus of Juniusus Bassus depicts a series of Biblical stories, including Abacus's impending sacrifice to Isaac. These sculpture scenes are on the outside of the marble early Christian sarcophagus used to burial juniors bath. He died in 359. This sarcophagus is expressed as "probably one of the most famous works of early Christian salvation sculptures." The sarcophagus which was originally in or under the old St. Peter's Basilica was rediscovered in 1597 and is now under the modern church of St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican St. Peter's Cathedral Museum. The base is about 4 x 8 x 4 feet. The depiction of the Old Testament scene was chosen as a pioneer of Christ's sacrifice in the New Testament in the form of an earlier typology. Daniel on the right side of the lion's hideout, and Abraham on the left side is going to sacrifice Isaac