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cadaver and tomb
Free-standing cadaver tomb of John FitzAlan, 14th Earl of Arundel ( died 1435 )
However, the term ' cadaver tomb ' can really be applied to other varieties of monuments, e. g. with skeletons or with the deceased completely wrapped in a shroud.
Beneath Masaccio's fresco of the Trinity painted in 1425-28 in Santa Maria Novella, Florence, is a painted representation of a cadaver tomb.
There was a revival in the Renaissance, as testified by the two examples to Louis XI and his wife Anne of Brittany at Saint-Denis, and of Queen Catherine de Medici who likewise had her husband Henry II buried in a cadaver tomb.
There are a number of cadaver monuments and tomb slabs to be found in Germany and the Netherlands.
Henry suffered a mortal head wound from a lance fragment and, despite the efforts of royal surgeon Ambroise Paré, he died on 10 July 1559 from septicaemia and was buried in a cadaver tomb in Saint Denis Basilica.
The church contains a " Treacle " Bible, a table tomb and cadaver of Archdeacon Sponne, Rector 1422 – 1448.
The cadaver tomb below carries the epigram: " I was once what you are, and what I am you will become ".
Perhaps the most striking to contemporary minds is the transi, or cadaver tomb, a tomb that depicts the decayed corpse of the deceased.
# REDIRECT cadaver tomb
He is buried in Canterbury Cathedral, in a " cadaver tomb " between the upper choir and the choir ambulatory adjacent to the north-east transept.
Cave's sarcophagus is a cadaver tomb.
John FitzAlan's free-standing cadaver tomb was opened in 1857, to reveal a skeleton missing one leg.
Thomas Chaucer and Alice de la Pole are buried in the Church of England parish church of Saint Mary adjoining the almshouses: Thomas with a memorial brass on a tomb chest and Alice beneath a church monument, complete with her cadaver inside.
He suffered terribly, and, despite the efforts of royal surgeon Ambroise Paré, died on July 10, 1559 and was buried in a cadaver tomb in Saint Denis Basilica.
His tomb included his portrait as a kneeling figure by Germain Pilon, who also executed the funeral cadaver portrait of his wife ( both now in the Louvre Museum ).

cadaver and transi
A depiction of a rotting cadaver in art ( as opposed to a skeleton ) is called a transi.

cadaver and ",
Albert King's 1995 Journal of Trauma article, " Humanitarian Benefits of Cadaver Research on Injury Prevention ", clearly states the value in human lives saved as a result of cadaver research.
" In London in the 1880s, playing in small theater clubs " on a stage the size of a cadaver ", not daring to play on a Friday night or to light a fire on stage on a Saturday afternoon ( both because of the Jewish Sabbath ), forced to use a cardboard ram's horn when playing Uriel Acosta so as not to blaspheme, Yiddish theatre nonetheless took on much of what was best in European theatrical tradition.

cadaver and for
His name is Praisegod Piepsam, and he is rather fully described as to his clothing and physiognomy in a way which relates him to a sinister type in the author's repertory -- he is a forerunner of those enigmatic strangers in `` Death In Venice '', for example, who represent some combination of cadaver, exotic, and psychopomp.
Making an anatomical gift is a separate transaction from being an organ donor, in which any useful organs are removed from the unembalmed cadaver for medical Organ transplant.
There are some medical conditions, such as amputations, or various surgeries, that can make the cadaver unsuitable for these purposes.
" The creature was put in a van to be taken away for testing, whereupon police chased them down and took the cadaver under an act of parliament which prohibits the removal of " unidentified creatures " from Loch Ness.
However, the source for this was Liutprand of Cremona, who mistakenly placed the cadaver synod in the pontificate of Sergius III, instead of Stephen VI.
Simon also locates the dead parachutist who had been mistaken for the beast, and is the sole member of the group to recognise that the " monster " is a cadaver.
Logistically prosection allows more flexibility than dissection as there is no commitment to provide a cadaver per a certain number of students, this in fact create opportunities for cadavers to be used, for example at Birmingham, for Special Study Modules ( SSMs ) and postgraduate teaching.
The term can also be used for a monument that shows only the cadaver without the live person.
These cadaver tombs, with their demanding sculptural program, were made only for high-ranking nobles, usually royalty or bishops or abbots, because one had to be rich to afford to have one made, and powerful enough to be allotted space for one in a church.
* < 1539-the cadaver monument which Abbot Wakeman had erected for himself is only a cenotaph, because he was not buried there
Tuscaloosa Mayor Walt Maddox announced that he was requesting 500 additional National Guard Troops as well as calling for more volunteer aid workers and cadaver teams for the recovery of bodies in order to prevent the spread of disease.
UAGA governs organ donations for the purpose of transplantation, and it also governs the making of anatomical gifts of one's cadaver to be dissected in the study of medicine.
He notes that for every cadaver used, each year 61 people survive due to wearing seat belts, 147 live due to air bags, and 68 survive windshield impact.
They received 8 – 10 guineas for each cadaver accepted.
The male cadaver was encased and frozen in a gelatin and water mixture in order to stabilize the specimen for cutting.
In addition to the three policemen, the office is staffed by a German Shepherd called Rex who functions variously as a cadaver dog, a sniffer dog ( for both contraband and narcotics ) and as another pair of eyes and ears for his team.
* cadaver ( WebDAV client ) A command-line WebDAV client for Unix.
In February 2006, Dr. Michael Mastromarino, then a 42-year-old former New Jersey-based oral surgeon and CEO and executive director of operations at Biomedical Tissue Services, was convicted along with three employees of illegally harvesting human bones, organs, tissue and other cadaver parts from individuals awaiting cremation, for forging numerous consent forms, and for selling the illegally obtained body parts to medical companies without consent of their families, and then sentenced to long prison terms.

cadaver and death
Forensic pathology is a branch of pathology concerned with determining the cause of death by examination of a cadaver.
In the " double-decker " tombs, in Erwin Panofsky's phrase, a carved stone bier displays on the top level the recumbent effigy or gisant of a person as they were before death or soon after their death, where they may be life-sized and sometimes represented kneeling in prayer, and as a rotting cadaver on the bottom level, often shrouded and sometimes complete with worms and other flesh-eating wildlife.
Decayed cadavers can also be used to depict death ; in medieval Europe, they were often featured in artistic depictions of the danse macabre, or in cadaver tombs which depicted the living and decomposed body of the person entombed.
They beat him to death and threw his limp body over the embassy's iron fence to the waiting populace, who then ripped his cadaver to pieces and paraded the parts through the capital's neighborhoods.

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