There also exist
naiskos-type
figurines or other types of temples formed in
terracotta, examples of which abound at the
Louvre Museum in
Paris. The form of the
naiskos suggests a religious context, relating especially to Greek
funerary culture. Some of the Hellenistic inscriptions found in the
Bay of Grama are placed inside a
naiskos, and in this case the religious context is an invocation of
Castor and Pollux (Dioskouroi) for a safe passage across the
Adriatic, rather than funerary. A similar style, called the
aedicula, is observed in
Roman art. ==See also==