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DBpedia 2014

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Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { ?s ?p The Latin word refrigerium literally means ‘refreshment’, and is the origin of the English noun ‘refrigerator’ (Webster, 1913). In ancient Rome, the word refrigerium referred specifically to a commemorative meal for the dead consumed in a graveyard. These meals were held on the day of burial, then again on the ninth day after the funeral, and annually thereafter. Early Christians continued the refrigerium ritual, by taking food to gravesites and catacombs in honor of Christian martyrs, as well as relatives.The early Christian theologian Tertullian used the term refrigerium interim to describe a happy state in which the souls of the blessed are refreshed while they await the Last Judgment and their definitive entry into Heaven. Later Christian writers referred to a similar, interim state of grace as the "Bosom of Abraham" (a term borrowed from the Hebrew Bible). Tertullian's notions of refrigerium were part of a debate on whether the souls of the dead had to await the End of Times and the Last Judgment before their entrance into either Heaven or Hell, or whether, on the other hand, each soul was assigned its place in the eternal afterlife immediately after death (see particular judgment).. }

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