This example of marble tomb stelae, primarily seen in Phrygian Anatolia, is dated to the middle of the 2nd century. This stele type, featuring door motifs, took temple or house-shaped tombs as its inspiration. It is thought that these door motifs symbolized the bond between life and death and that each panel represented the rooms of a house or the entrance to a tomb. In this example from the SSM Collection of Archeological Artifacts, the door is divided into four panels, with circular doorknob motifs at the center of each one. There is an arched pediment over the door, which features a mirror, a comb, a basket of wool, a spindle, and a spinner, as well as palmettes on the corners. While these motifs are typically seen on the funerary stelae of women, those belonging to men bear rolls of paper, writing tablets, and styluses. Inscribed in Greek above the pediment arch is the sentence “ΟCΡΕΓΙΑΝΟCΠΑΤΡΙΚΑΙΜΗΤΡΙΜΝΗΜΗC ΧΑΡΙΝ” meaning “Regianus [?] built this tomb in memory of his parents.”