Product Details:
|
Material: | Plastic | Size: | 45*13cm |
---|---|---|---|
Color: | Gold,Silver Or Bronze | ||
Highlight: | coffin accessories,funeral accessories |
Main information:
Product name: PLASTIC ROSE COFFIN DECORATION
Model: DP001
Brand: B&R
Application: Casket or Coffin decoration
Origin: China
Manufacturer: Sumer International (Beijing) Trading Co.,Ltd
Product detail:
Size: 45*13 cm
Material: Iron
Color: Gold, Silver or Bronze (Optional)
Attached on casket by pin
MOQ:2000 pcs
Packing: Carton
Main feature:
Professionally engaged in funeral field over 10 years;
Customized products acceptable;
Good quality and competitive price;
More Information:
Burial methods
In many cultures, human corpses were usually buried in soil. The roots of burial as a practice reach back into the Middle Palaeolithic and coincide with the appearance ofHomo neanderthalensis and Homo sapiens, in Europe and Africa respectively. As a result, burial grounds are found throughout the world. Through time, mounds of earth,temples, and underground caverns were used to store the dead bodies of ancestors. In modern times, the custom of burying dead people below ground, with a stone marker to indicate the burial place, is used in most cultures; although other means such as cremation are becoming more popular in the West (cremation is the norm in India and mandatory in Japan[citation needed]).
Some burial practices are heavily ritualized; others are simply practical.
Catholic Church in Europe
Region | Total population | Catholic | % Catholic | % of global Catholic pop. |
Southeast Europe | 65,903,464 | 6,562,775 | 9.95% | 0.61% |
Central Europe | 74,591,476 | 56,787,176 | 74.8% | 5.19% |
Eastern Europe | 228,118,665 | 9,702,334 | 4.25% | 0.90% |
Western Europe | 381,458,905 | 211,466,942 | 55.43% | 19.67% |
Total | 730,072,510 | 285,916,457 | 37.85% | 26.37% |
Catholic Church in Asia
Region | Total population | Catholic | % Catholic | % of global Catholic pop. |
Central Asia | 92,019,166 | 199,086 | 1.23% | 0.01% |
East Asia | 1,528,384,440 | 13,853,142 | 0.90% | 1.28% |
South Asia | 1,437,326,682 | 20,107,050 | 1.39% | 1.87% |
Southeast Asia | 571,337,070 | 86,701,421 | 15.17% | 8.06% |
Total | 3,629,067,358 | 120,860,699 | 3.33% | 11.24% |
The words coffin and casket are often used interchangeably to describe a box used to bury a dead body in. Although the general purpose of each is the same, there are small differences between the two.
The term coffin has been used to describe a container that holds dead bodies for burial since the early 16th century. The shape of a coffin typically resembles the shape of a body and has six or eight sides. It is wider at the top for the shoulders and gradually decreases in width toward the opposite end where the feet are placed (picture Dracula’s spider web covered coffin in all the scary movies). Depending on all the bells and whistles a person chooses to adorn a coffin with, the hexagonal or octagonal shape is considered to save wood for construction and can be cheaper than a casket.
On the other hand, the word casket was originally used to describe a box used to store jewelry and other small valuable items before coming to have an additional meaning somewhat synonymous with coffin around the mid-19th century. A casket is typically a four-sided rectangular box and, when used for burying people, often contains a split-lid for viewing purposes.
More Picture:
Plastic rose DP001
Product of same design but made of matal, D013 zamak coffin decoration
Factory view-gate
Factory view-inside
Contact Person: Ms. Helen Ren
Tel: +86-13801202918
Fax: 86-10-67163945