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  1. Höcker, Christoph (Kissing), “Cenaculum”, in: Brill’s New Pauly, says the following about cenaculum: "originally the dining room on the upper floor of the Roman house. From time to time the term cenaculum includes the entire upper floor (Varro, Ling. 5,162; Fest. 54,6); the rooms described as cenacula were for accommodating guests of an inferior rank or slaves.

  2. www.wikiwand.com › es › CenaculumCenaculum - Wikiwand

    El cenaculum o cenáculo es una estancia de la casa romana acomodada donde se comía de diario en familia. Este comedor informal se encontraba originalmente en el piso de arriba de la casa, encima del tablinum, situado en la planta baja, donde los huéspedes eran formalmente recibidos y el pater familias hacía sus negocios.

  3. Cenaculum of Jerusalem 耶穌最後晚餐廳 Last Supper Room of Jesus. About ...

  4. The Cenaculum is visited by crowds of excited Christian pilgrims on daily basis, and was part of the itinerary of three Popes who visited the holy land in the years 1964, 2000 and 2009. The room itself is really a Crusader structure dating to the 12th-13th Century, but by tradition its origins are from Roman times.

  5. es.hispanopedia.com › wiki › CenaculumCenaculum - Hispanopedia

    El cenaculum o cenáculo (del latín cena, "comida") es una estancia de la casa romana acomodada donde se comía de diario en familia. Este comedor informal se encontraba originalmente en el piso de arriba de la casa, encima del tablinum , situado en la planta baja, donde los huéspedes eran formalmente recibidos y el pater familias hacía sus negocios.

  6. Cenáculo - Diccionario de Jerusalén. Jesús celebró con sus discípulos la última cena en una gran sala alta después de la ascensión del Señor, subieron los discipulos a la sala alta, donde acostumbraban a reunirse Vg coenaculum; (Hechos 1:13) «Y entrados, subieron al aposento alto, donde moraban Pedro y Jacobo, Juan, Andrés, Felipe, Tomás, Bartolomé, Mateo, Jacobo hijo de Alfeo ...

  7. The Cenaculum. Holy Places. The Coenaculum marks the site of the "upper room," where the Last Supper of Jesus and his disciples was held, and combines Crusader and Arab architecture. Most of the building is medieval, and was built over David's Tomb and perhaps Jerusalem's first church.