cubiculum การใช้
- A single dormant Nephilim now remains, the Cubiculum Nephili or " Sleeper ".
- The term cubicle comes from the Latin " cubiculum ", for bed chamber.
- As before, a flat stone slab would then seal the " cubiculum ".
- The private nature of the " cubiculum " made it a place for contemplation and religious observance, especially when illicit.
- Another type of housing unit for Plebes was a cenaculum, an apartment, divided into three individual rooms : cubiculum, exedra, and medianum.
- The mosaic of Zeus and Antiope lies on the floor of the " cubiculum ", or bedchamber of the villa, which measures.
- Constantine the Great first learned of Christianity in his " cubiculum " and fasted there for a week before his first confession and baptism.
- Also included in this style are paintings similar to the one found in Cubiculum 15 of the Villa of Agrippa Postumus in Boscotrecase ( c . 10 BC ).
- Then a low wall would be built in the front, leaving a trough ( the " cubiculum ", " chamber " ) in which to place the body.
- Italian polymath Giambattista della Porta described the camera obscura, which he called " obscurum cubiculum ", in the 1558 first edition of his book series " Magia Naturalis ".
- As in many houses in Pompeii, here the smaller dining room ( " triclinium minus " ) forms a suite with the adjoining " cubiculum " and bath.
- Though often believed to be a triclinium, the room with the frescoes could have also been a cubiculum of the matriarch, which would indicate that the matriarch was a member of the cult.
- Allieus Maius and his family occupied the extensive ground floor, which featured an impressive atrium, multiple bedrooms ( cubiculum ), several dining or recreational rooms and a peristype featuring sixteen Ionic columns.
- Via a staircase down, one finds the arcades where varied cubicula ( including the cubiculum of Giona's fine four stage cycle of paintings, dating to the end of the 4th century ).
- Other scholars categorize Room 43 simply as a bedroom " ( cubiculum ) ", which often featured erotic imagery, and find it unnecessary to conclude that sexual entertainment was offered to guests there.
- Before the term " camera obscura " was first used in 1604, many other expressions were used including " cubiculum obscurum ", " cubiculum tenebricosum ", " conclave obscurum " and " locus obscurus ".
- Before the term " camera obscura " was first used in 1604, many other expressions were used including " cubiculum obscurum ", " cubiculum tenebricosum ", " conclave obscurum " and " locus obscurus ".
- The smaller houses strongly resembled the Pompeii-style houses of the time, measuring about 8 meters wide, containing a tablinium-type room and a minimum of one cubiculum, and were grouped around a courtyard.
- Francis Blackburne in 1765 argued that John Jortin misread this and other passages from Luther, while Gottfried Fritschel pointed out in 1867 that it actually refers to the soul of a man " in this life " ( " homo enim in hac vita " ) tired from his daily labour ( " defatigus diurno labore " ) who at night enters his bedchamber ( " sub noctem intrat in cubiculum suum " ) and whose sleep is interrupted by dreams.