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  2. Titan Casket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titan_Casket

    Titan Casket was founded in 2016 as a vendor on Amazon by Scott Ginsberg. In 2018, he reached out to co-founders, Joshua Siegel and Elizabeth Siegel, and the three officially launched the company in January 2020. [3] In June 2022, Titan Casket raised $3.5 million in seed-round funding from Reformation Partners. [4][5]

  3. Amazon Freevee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Freevee

    Austria. Parent. Amazon. URL. www.amazon.com /freevee. Current status. Active. Amazon Freevee (stylized as freevee and fv), also shortened as Freevee, formerly known as IMDb Freedive and IMDb TV, and sometimes spelled FV, is an American ad-supported video-on-demand (VOD) streaming service owned by Amazon, with original and licensed programming.

  4. DRAG-U-LA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DRAG-U-LA

    The fiberglass body of DRAG-U-LA was built from a coffin that Richard "Korky" Korkes, Barris's project engineer, was able to purchase from a funeral home in North Hollywood. Korkes said in 2013 that it was illegal to sell a coffin without a death certificate, so he made a deal with the funeral director to pay in cash and have the coffin left ...

  5. Hanging coffins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanging_coffins

    Hanging coffins in China are known in Mandarin as xuanguan (simplified Chinese: 悬 棺; traditional Chinese: 懸 棺; pinyin: xuán guān) which also means "hanging coffin". They are an ancient funeral custom of some ethnic minorities. The most famous hanging coffins are those which were made by the Bo people (now extinct) of Sichuan and Yunnan.

  6. Safety coffin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safety_coffin

    Safety coffin. Taberger's Safety Coffin employed a bell as a signaling device, for anybody buried alive. A safety coffin or security coffin is a coffin fitted with a mechanism to prevent premature burial or allow the occupant to signal that they have been buried alive. A large number of designs for safety coffins were patented during the 18th ...

  7. Burial vault (tomb) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burial_vault_(tomb)

    A burial vault is a structural stone or brick-lined underground tomb or 'burial chamber' for the interment of a single body or multiple bodies underground. The main difference between entombment in a subterranean vault and a traditional in-ground burial is that the coffin is not placed directly in the earth, but is placed in a burial chamber ...

  8. Stone box grave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stone_box_grave

    Construction. A stone box grave is a coffin of stone slabs arranged in a rectangular shape, into which a deceased individual was placed. Common materials used for construction of the graves were limestone and shale, both varieties of stone which naturally break into slab-like shapes. The materials for the bottom of the graves often varies.

  9. Burial vault (enclosure) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burial_vault_(enclosure)

    A burial vault (also known as a burial liner, grave vault, and grave liner) is a container, formerly made of wood or brick but more often today made of metal or concrete, that encloses a coffin to help prevent a grave from sinking. Wooden coffins (or caskets) decompose, and often the weight of earth on top of the coffin, or the passage of heavy ...