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requies

Requies is a Latin noun meaning rest or repose. In classical and Late Latin texts, the term functions as an abstract noun describing a state of quiet, relief, or sleep, and it is commonly encountered in epitaphs to signify the repose of the deceased. The word is closely related to quies, from which it is derived, and shares the semantic field of peace and stillness that pervades Latin discussions of the body and soul.

In ecclesiastical Latin, the concept of requies is connected with death, memorialization, and the desire for

There are no widely recognized modern concepts or entities officially named “requies” outside such scholarly usage.

See also: quies, requiescat in pace, requiem.

a
peaceful
afterlife.
The
more
famous
formula
involving
rest
in
death
is
requiescat
in
pace,
which
uses
a
related
verb
form
rather
than
the
noun
itself.
The
noun
requies
appears
primarily
in
literary
and
epigraphic
contexts
and
is
rarely
used
in
modern
English
outside
scholarly
discussion
of
Latin
grammar
and
texts.
When
encountered
in
English-language
sources,
it
is
usually
in
quotes
or
as
part
of
linguistic
analysis
rather
than
as
a
term
with
independent
cultural
or
technical
meaning.