A slab stela[citation needed] is a horizontally oriented stela from ancient Egypt. Some of the earliest tablets from mid- to late-3rd millennium BC were painted slab stelas. A small number of Ancient Egyptian dignitaries or their wives had a slab stela.
Some funerary stelas were in the form of slab steles, as opposed to being of the more common vertical type.
From the middle 3rd millennium BC, some famous horizontal lintels were made. The noted architect Hemon (Hemiunu) had one. It is housed in the Pelizaeus Museum of Germany. The horizontal lintel was used in other cultures in ancient times, for example in the Mesopotamian cultures.
See also
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