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  1. The meaning of MEMENTO MORI is a reminder of mortality; especially : death's-head. Did you know?

  2. Memento mori je latinské príslovie, ktoré znamená Pamätaj, že zomrieš. Používalo sa aj vo variante Memento mortis – Pamätaj na smrť . Bolo inšpiráciou pre mnohé umelecké diela, ktoré mali divákovi pripomínať jeho smrteľnosť a krehkosť života (je to vzácne a kedykoľvek môže zmiznúť z nášho dosahu).

  3. History of Memento Mori. Wisdom. The one perennial truth – rich or not, successful or not, religious, philosophical, it doesn’t matter – you will die. From the beginning of time to the end, death is the one universal inescapable commonality. Kings or peasants, brilliant or stupid, everyone dies or is dead. Some try not to think about it.

  4. The Memento Mori Coin. We are excited to announce that the Daily Stoic is now releasing its own Memento Mori—”remember that you will die”—medallion as a physical manifestation for you to carry with everywhere. Each coin is handcrafted in the United States by a custom mint operating in Minnesota since 1882.

  5. www.tate.org.uk › art › art-termsMemento mori | Tate

    Memento mori is a Latin phrase meaning ‘remember you must die’. A basic memento mori painting would be a portrait with a skull but other symbols commonly found are hour glasses or clocks, extinguished or guttering candles, fruit, and flowers. Closely related to the memento mori picture is the vanitas still life.

  6. This painting by the Flemish Baroque painter Jan Fyt depicts spoils of the hunt: the lifeless body of a hare surrounded by dead birds. These elements are also conventions of memento mori still life painting. This genre, also referred to as "vanitas" (Latin for "vanity") often contained subjects such as dead animals or decaying fruit as symbols ...

  7. Memento Mori — (Latin: remember you will die)–is the ancient practice of reflection on our mortality that goes back to Socrates, who said that the proper practice of philosophy is “about nothing else but dying and being dead.”. In his Meditations—essentially his own private journal—Marcus Aurelius wrote that “You could leave life right now.

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