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whencyclopedia:

Hestia is the ancient Greek goddess of the hearth and home, and of hospitality so her responsibilities included presiding over the preparation of family meals, baking bread, and entertaining guests. As the goddess of the family hearth and also the communal sacrificial flame, part of every sacrifice made to the gods also went to her. To the Romans, she was known as Vesta.

Hestia was the goddess not just of the hearth of the gods on Olympus, but also for the hearths of private homes and the public hearth of towns and cities. In the homes of ancient Greece, the hearth could be a portable brazier and it symbolised the heart and soul of the household. Since Hestia was believed to preside over all of the hearths both private and public, she didn’t have many shrines or temples dedicated to her, but she did have a few cults in Attica at Piraeus, Eleusis, Halimos, and Krokonidai.


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germanpostwarmodern:
“House (1977) built for himself in Berlin, Germany, by Gert Eckel
”

germanpostwarmodern:

House (1977) built for himself in Berlin, Germany, by Gert Eckel

rick6919:

Hopefully, he and his offspring will wind up with an all expense paid trip to a federal prison, have his businesses absconded by the Justice Department and dissolved for the better good of the public…

amntenofre:
“ detail of funerary motifs represented on a beaded fishnet:
a sacred scarab (in the middle) flanked at left and at right by four ‘Djed’-pillars and by two images of Anubis in His form of sacred jackal crouching upon a shrine.
664-332...

amntenofre:

detail of funerary motifs represented on a beaded fishnet:
a sacred scarab (in the middle) flanked at left and at right by four ‘Djed’-pillars and by two images of Anubis in His form of sacred jackal crouching upon a shrine.
664-332 BCE; now in the Louvre Museum…

grandegyptianmuseum:
“ Head of Anubis, with a hinged jaw, used as an oracle mask. Anubis was the jackal-headed god of the dead, cemeteries and embalming in Egyptian mythology. New Kingdom, 19th Dynasty, ca.1292-1189 BC. Now in the Louvre.
”

grandegyptianmuseum:

Head of Anubis, with a hinged jaw, used as an oracle mask. Anubis was the jackal-headed god of the dead, cemeteries and embalming in Egyptian mythology. New Kingdom, 19th Dynasty, ca.1292-1189 BC. Now in the Louvre.

flyingturtlepei:

Two Against One