at the
Londa Nanggala Cave in
Sulawesi Hanging coffins (
liang tokek, literally "hanging burial") is one of the funerary practices of the
Toraja people of
Sulawesi, either for primary or secondary burials. The distinctively boat-shaped coffins, known as
erong, are always placed below overhanging parts of the cliff-face. These can be natural overhangs or cave openings, but some coffins are placed beneath man-made overhangs. They are guarded by carved wooden representations of the dead known as
tau-tau. Older
tau-tau are more abstract, but more modern
tau-tau can be quite lifelike. The more common types of ancient burial were the
liang sillik and
liang erong which were cave burials; with the latter utilizing coffins (
erong), while the former does not. Other more recent burial customs include
liang pak (tombs carved into walls),
tangdan (house-shaped tombs for noblemen, usually placed on hilltops), and
liang patane (house-shaped tombs for commoners). ==See also==