Stone slab

Stone table made of slabs.
Dolmen made of stone-slabs Romanyà de la Selva (Baix Empordà).

A stone slab is a big stone, flat and of little thickness, that are generally used for paving floors, for covering walls or as headstones.[1]

Other definitions refine the meaning a bit more:

Slabs used in dolmens

Most dolmen constructions they were build using stone slabs of big dimensions. Their architecture often includes a corridor of access that can be constructed usins stone slabs or dry stones. The burial chamber, with variable shapes (rectangular, polygonal, oval, circular ...) can also be preceded by an anteroom. In some dolmens, the entrance has a door cut into one or more vertical stone slabs.[2][3]

Slabs in the construction

Floor with slabs in a street of Pompeia

The main applications of the slabs as material of construction are for pavings and in the construction of roofs. But they can be employed for other uses, among them:

Slabs in the gastronomy

A system to cook the foods is “to the slab”.[7] In like manner to the systems of “to the iron” or “grilled”, in the procedure to bake to the slab the foods course (meat, fish, vegetables,...) They put on a slab hot on of the fire. With oil, butter or lard and all the aditaments with that want to dress the teak.[8]

Grave slabs

Multilingual grave slab: Welsh, English, French

From prehistoric times there are examples of graves covered with a stone slab, in its natural state or carved. This use as tombstone has extended the concept of natural slab to the tombstone variant: flat, thin and polished. Example: the slab in the tomb of King Pere el Gran of Aragon, with a a weight of 900kg.[11]

The tombstones use to have some inscriptions. The information on the stone slab traditionally includes the name of the deceased and his date of birth and death. The inscriptions are generally in the frontal side of the stone slab but also in some cases in the verso and around the edges of the slab, some families request to write an inscription in the unseen part of the stone slab (oriented to the ground). Apart from the name, some slabs also have epitaphs in praise of the deceased or citations of religious texts, as "Requiescat in pace".[12]

Slab washboards

Different types of washboards

Wash the clothes is a basic need in the societies civilised and, in general, in all the parts of the world. In primitive periods - before the running water, the washing machines and the detergents- it was necessary to go to wash the clothes to the river bank or in a laundry room

The clothes washed manually, with soap needed some rubbing and sometimes striking them against a hard surface. The aim was to do penetrate the mix of water and soap between the fibres of the fabric to pull-out the dirt. The slabs to wash the clothes were slabs of natural stone chosen to present a fine and relatively flat surface. The small rounded irregularities could help of friction in the washing process.[13][14]

Slabs as hunting traps

Tunisian trap to hunt alive birds. A slab-trap is very much alike but more conclusive.

Hunt with slab is a system to hunting by means of a slab-trap. The fundamental part of the device is a slab. Preparing this trap was a delicate task.[16][17][10]

The term "slab" in toponyms

From the term slab and his derivatives there are a big quantity of toponyms among them.

See also

References

  1. Thomas Dyche; William Pardon (1740). A New General English Dictionary; Peculiarly Calculated for the Use and Improvement of Such as are Unacquainted with the Learned Languages... and Now Finishʼd by William Pardon.. Richard Ware, at the Bible and Sun in Warwick-Lane, Amen-Corner. pp. 772–.
  2. 1 2 Francesc Antillach Comabella; Antònia Ortiz Pedrosa (2003). Caminades per la Noguera. Cossetània Edicions. pp. 60–. ISBN 978-84-96035-21-8.
  3. Anna Borbonet; Jordi Sanglas i Puigferrer (1999). Tavertet, el seu terme i els seus noms de lloc. L'Abadia de Montserrat. pp. 100–. ISBN 978-84-8415-110-4.
  4. Pablo Collado Trabanco; David Nuño Peña (2006). Supervisión de ejecución de acabados, revestimientos y cubiertas. Lex Nova. pp. 125–. ISBN 978-84-7557-180-5.
  5. Estructuras metálicas. Reverte. 1980. pp. 169–. ISBN 978-84-7146-199-5.
  6. Juan José Trujillo Cebrián (10 December 2013). Ejecución de faldones en cubiertas. EOCB0208. IC Editorial. pp. 208–. ISBN 978-84-15994-96-1.
  7. www.esimple.it, © Esimple srl -. "Tortello alla lastra".
  8. Primitive Cooking Stuffed Bannock On A Stone
  9. La cuina catalana segons Jaume Fàbrega
  10. 1 2 Josep Gironès Descarrega (2005). La cuina més senzilla d'una dona del terròs. Cossetània Edicions. pp. 43–. ISBN 978-84-9791-121-4.
  11. Llosa de la tomba de Pere el Gran
  12. Fergus Wessell. "Headstone Gallery". Retrieved 2013-09-05.
  13. Josep Massot i Muntaner (10 November 2010). Obra del Cançoner Popular de Catalunya. Volum XX.: Missions de recerca. L'Abadia de Montserrat. pp. 219–. ISBN 978-84-9883-337-9.
  14. "QUI TÉ ROBA PER RENTAR?". Icaria Editorial. 16 July 2008 via Google Books.
  15. "History of washboards, invention of zinc scrub boards & other rubbing boards".
  16. Moisés D. Boza (March 2012). El trampeo y demás artes de caza tradicionales en la península ibérica. Editorial HISPANO EUROPEA. pp. 4–. ISBN 978-84-255-1446-3.
  17. Diccionari catalá-castellá-llatí-frances-italiá, 1. En la imprèmpta de Joseph Torner. 1839. pp. 147–.

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