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During the month of the sacrifice to the Sun, as a gift in the temple, he built an aedicula.
A similar style, called the Aedicula, is observed in Roman art.
In Roman architecture the aedicula has this representative function in the society.
The word aedicula is the diminutive of the Latin aedes, a temple building or house.
Instead, the entire space is taken up by decorative miniature towers on pilasters (called Aedicula).
See also the diminutive aedicula, a small shrine.
The aedicula above the entry is echoed by a pedimented reredos behind the altar.
In ancient Roman religion, an aedicula (plural aediculae) is a small shrine.
Below the eaves are decorative miniature towers (the aedicula) on pilasters.
These observances probably took place at an altar or small shrine (aedicula), not a separate temple precinct.
The main entrance was divided into two by an aedicula for a statue with two elegant Corinthian columns.
Tiberius Velianas the pleasing aedicula has given.
On top of the half pilasters are miniature decorative towers (sikhara, called aedicula) with niches underneath.
The grave claimed by the Church to be that of St. Peter lies at the foot of the aedicula beneath the floor.
In the 18th century an impressive Italian garden was added with stairs, fountains, water features and an aedicula decorated with frescoes.
An aedicula, to serve as a Torah Ark added in the 4th century CE.
The carved and gilded aedicula, serves as a backdrop to the main altar surrounded by marble, that is faithful to the neo-Romanesque style.
According to the inscription, the building in which the college was housed took the form of a shrine (aedicula) and pergola, with an attached covered solarium.
A number of Roman graves and an aedicula have been found in the area, indicating the southern extent of the nearby Nevidonium necropolis.
It has an elegant aedicula with two pilasters with grooved sides and a triangular tympanum made of paonazzetto.
The outer walls of the shrines are quite austere save for the pilasters that are capped by miniature decorative towers (aedicula).
The theatre at Echternach appears to have been dedicated to Intarabus, as was an aedicula at Ernzen.
The walls of the shrine have pilasters, with the spaces between them containing, in relief, pavilions, and miniature decorative towers (aedicula) on slender half pilasters.
Other Latin words for temple or shrine are aedes, aedicula, fanum, delubrum and templum, though this last word encompasses the whole religiously sanctioned precinct.
A doorway, with a 19th-century two-part wooden door with iron hinges, is recessed into an aedicula with a corbelled pointed arch and a gable above.