MarketInstrumentum domesticum
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Instrumentum domesticum

In archaeology, instrumentum domesticum refers to instruments, tools, and other artifacts intended for ordinary and domestic use. It also includes replicas of such objects made to be deposited in graves. The name is Latin for "domestic instruments", a term originally defined by Roman Law.

Gallery
File:Foculum (Serving Tray) with Jars and Implements Etruscan from Chiusi A Tomb Group 550-500 BCE Earthen Bucchero ware.jpg|Clay replica of a serving tray (foculum) made for furnishing an Etruscan grave. The original tray and utensils may have been made of wood, metal, or other materials. Chiusi, Tomb A Group, 550-500 BCE. File:Fragment of a terracotta neck-amphora (jar) MET DP21771.jpg|Fragment of a Tyrrhenian amphora depicting the fight between Herakles (Hercules), wearing a lion skin, and the Amazon warrior Andromache (whose name is written in Greek from right to left). 575-560 BCE. File:Chocolate cup depicting a mythic scene, Maya, El Zotz or vicinity, Guatemala, 650-800 AD, ceramic, polychrome slip - Princeton University Art Museum - DSC07151.jpg|Maya chocolate cup with mythological scene and Mayan glyphs. El Zotz region, Guatemala, 650-800 CE. File:Romano-Celtic mirror (Desborough).jpg|The Desborough Mirror, Romano-Celtic culture, found in England. 50 BCE - 50 CE. ==References==
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