"1911 Encyclop\u00E6dia Britannica/Acerra (pottery)"@es . . "1911 Encyclop\u00E6dia Britannica/Header ACERRA, in Roman antiquity, a small box or pot for holding incense, as distinct from the turibulum (thurible) or censer in which incense was burned. The name was also given by the Romans to a little altar placed near the dead, on which incense was offered every day till the burial. In ecclesiastical Latin the term acerra is still applied to the incense boats used in the Roman ritual. \n* 15px|Colabora en Wikisource. Wikisource contiene el original de o sobre 1911 Encyclop\u00E6dia Britannica/Acerra (pottery). En el cual se ha basado este art\u00EDculo."@es . "es:Acerra"@es . "Acerra"@es . . . . "Acetabulum"@es . . . . "1911 Encyclop\u00E6dia Britannica/Header ACERRA, in Roman antiquity, a small box or pot for holding incense, as distinct from the turibulum (thurible) or censer in which incense was burned. The name was also given by the Romans to a little altar placed near the dead, on which incense was offered every day till the burial. In ecclesiastical Latin the term acerra is still applied to the incense boats used in the Roman ritual. Acerra, en la antig\u00FCedad romana, una peque\u00F1a caja o la olla para el incienso, a diferencia de la turibulum (thurible) o incensario en el que se quema incienso. El nombre fue dado por los romanos a un peque\u00F1o altar situado cerca de los muertos, en la que se ofreci\u00F3 incienso todos los d\u00EDas hasta el entierro. En el lat\u00EDn eclesi\u00E1stico Acerra plazo sigue siendo aplicado a las embarcaciones utilizadas incienso en el ritual romano. \n* 15px|Colabora en Wikisource. Wikisource contiene el original de o sobre 1911 Encyclop\u00E6dia Britannica/Acerra (pottery). En el cual se ha basado este art\u00EDculo."@es .