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Grave robbery

Grave robbery, tomb robbing, or tomb raiding is the act of uncovering a grave, tomb or crypt to steal commodities. It is usually perpetrated to take and profit from valuable artefacts or personal property.[n 1] A related act is body snatching, a term denoting the contested or unlawful taking of a body (seldom from a grave), which can be extended to the unlawful taking of organs alone.

Hole that was dug by looters in Chan Chan, Peru

Grave robbing has caused great difficulty to the studies of archaeology, art history, and history.[1][2] Countless precious grave sites and tombs have been robbed before scholars were able to examine them. In any way, the archaeological context and the historical and anthropological information are destroyed:

Looting obliterates the memory of the ancient world and turns its highest artistic creations into decorations, adornments on a shelf, divorced from historical context and ultimately from all meaning.[3]

Grave robbers who are not caught usually sell relatively modern items anonymously and artifacts on the black market. Those intercepted, in a public justice domain, are inclined to deny their guilt. Though some artifacts may make their way to museums or scholars, the majority end up in private collections.[4]

Effects on archaeology around the world

China

Grave robbing in China is a practice stretching back to antiquity; the classic Chinese text Lüshi Chunqiu, dating to the 2nd century BCE, advised readers to plan simple burials to discourage looting.[5] The presence of jade burial suits and other valuables in tombs were powerful temptations to rob graves.[6]

In modern China, grave robbing has been perpetrated by both amateurs (such as farmers and migrant laborers) and by professional thieves associated with transnational criminal networks.[5] The practice reached epidemic proportions in the 1980s, as the development and construction boom following the Chinese economic reform led to many archaeological sites being revealed.[5] Other peaks of tomb robbing occurred in the early 2000s and in the 2010s, when the plunder of graves was on the upswing due to an increase in global and domestic demand (and prices) for Chinese antiquities.[5] The provinces of Henan, Shaanxi, and Shanxi were particularly affected by tomb robbing.[5]

Egypt

Ancient Egyptian tombs are one of the most common examples of tomb or grave robbery. Most of the tombs in Egypt's Valley of the Kings were robbed within one hundred years of their sealing[7][8] (including the tomb of the famous King Tutankhamen, which was raided at least twice before it was discovered in 1922).[9] As most of the artifacts in these ancient burial sites have been discovered, it is through the conditions of the tombs and presumed articles that are missing in which historians and archaeologists are able to determine whether the tomb has been robbed. Egyptian pharaohs often kept records of the precious items in their tombs, so an inventory check is presumed for archaeologists.[10] Oftentimes, warnings would be left by the Pharaohs in the tombs of calamities and curses that would be laid upon any who touched the treasure, or the bodies, which did little to deter grave robbers. There are many examples of grave robbing in the Ancient World outside of Egypt.[11]

Classical Antiquity

The Romans (Byzantium) also suffered decades of theft and destruction of tombs, crypts, and graves.[12]

Europe

In parts of Europe, graves are robbed on an accelerating and alarming scale. Many grave robbers work with metal detectors and some of the groups are organised criminals, feeding the black market with highly prized archaeological artifacts.[13]

Merovingian graves in France and Germany and Anglo-Saxon graves in England contain many metal grave goods, mostly of iron. Grave robbers often leave them, being only interested in gold and silver. Grave contexts, ceramics, iron weapons and skeletons are typically destroyed in the process.[14]

In Eastern Europe, including Southeast Europe and the European part of Russia, grave robbers target all kinds of historically important graves, from prehistoric tombs to World War II graves.[15][16][13]

North America

Modern grave robbing in North America also involves long-abandoned or forgotten private Antebellum Period to pre-Great Depression era grave sites. These sites are often desecrated by grave robbers in search of old, hence valuable, jewelry. Affected sites are typically in rural, forested areas where once-prominent, wealthy landowners and their families were interred. The remote and often undocumented locations of defunct private cemeteries make them particularly susceptible to grave robbery. The practice may be encouraged by default upon the discovery of a previously unknown family cemetery by a new landowner.

One notable historical incident occurred during the evening of November 7, 1876, when a group of counterfeiters attempted to steal Abraham Lincoln's body from his grave in Springfield, Illinois, in an attempt to secure the release of their imprisoned leader, counterfeit engraver Benjamin Boyd. However, a Secret Service agent was present and had notified the police beforehand, so the grave robbers only succeeded in dislodging the lid of his coffin. As a consequence, when Lincoln was reburied, additional security measures were implemented to prevent further grave robbery attempts.[17][18]

Central America

Grave robbers often sold stolen Aztec or Mayan goods on the black market for an extremely high price. The buyers (museum curators, historians, etc.) didn't often suffer the repercussions of being in possession of stolen goods; the blame (and charges) were placed upon the lower-class grave robbers. Today's antiquities trade has become a streamlined industry, the speed at which these artifacts enter the market has grown exponentially. Laws to prevent grave robbing have been enacted in these regions, but due to extreme poverty, these grave robberies continue to grow each year.

Race

African Americans

 
Leonard Medical School Graduating Class of 1889

Enslaved and free blacks, immigrants, and the poor were frequently the target of grave robbing.

— Edward C. Halperin

African Americans would often be compelled to bury their dead in a potter's field, not having the access or money for a proper funeral. When buried in potter's fields, the dead were not normally buried very deeply. A grave robber could wait discreetly in the distance until nobody else was in sight, then quickly and easily disinter the body from its shallow resting place.[19]

Once the railroad was invented and tracks laid, the sale of the bodies of African American slaves from the South for dissection began in earnest. The bodies were robbed from graves by night doctors and shipped to medical schools in the northern part of the United States. One New England anatomy professor reported that, in the 1880s and 1890s, he entered into an arrangement in which he received, twice each semester, a shipment of 12 bodies of southern African Americans. "They came in barrels labeled [as containing] turpentine and were shipped to a local hardware store that dealt in painting materials".[20]

State laws in Mississippi and North Carolina were passed in the 19th century which allowed medical schools to use the remains of those at the bottom of society's hierarchy—the unclaimed bodies of poor persons and residents of almshouses, and those buried in potter's fields for anatomical study.[21][22] The option to dissect Confederate soldiers was also available, as Mississippi and North Carolina legally released those bodies to the families of the deceased. The North Carolina law also provided that the bodies of whites never be sent to an African American medical college (such as the Leonard Medical School). These African American medical schools typically obtained unclaimed Black ‘‘potter’s field bodies’’.[23]

Deterrents

Geography

 
Examples of the terrain within Mount Auburn Cemetery

The geography and placement of burial grounds became a deterrent within itself. This is because without the accessibility of the automobile (in the early 19th century), the transportation of bodies was difficult.

A perfect example of this is Mount Auburn Cemetery,[24] in Cambridge Massachusetts. It was the first rural cemetery inside the United States. The rural location of the cemetery created transportation issues. In addition, the terrain of and around the cemetery was formidable. Further, Henry Alexander Scammell Dearborn, the designer wanted to leave the natural terrain (including ponds and hills) within the cemetery. If someone wanted to rob a grave, they would have to maneuver around these obstacles and navigate large stretches of land in the dark. Note that Mount Auburn Cemetery is over 175 acres.[25] Other cemeteries, of the time, that were originally built away from populated areas for similar reasons, include: Mount Hope Cemetery in Bangor, Maine (1834); Laurel Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1836); Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Taunton, Massachusetts (1836); Mount Hope Cemetery in Rochester, New York (1838); Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York (1838); and, Green Mount Cemetery in Baltimore, Maryland (1838).

Mortsafes

 
Mortsafes at Logeriat Church in Perthshire, Scotland

A mortsafe or mort safe was an iron coffin or framework which helped to protect a grave by preventing the body from being dug up and taken away. Mortsafes were specific for the task of preventing bodies from being stolen for purposes of medical dissections.[26] Other variants included movable stone slabs capable of being hoisted over the fresh grave. All work on the principle of greatly increasing the required time for criminals to access the grave.

These deterrents, used commonly in Scotland, would be rented from the sexton until the body decomposed and were used on a circulating basis. At the creation of the Dissections Act the purpose became redundant and they were left where last used, sometimes being incorporated into the grave marker by addition of inscription.

Mort houses

 
Udny Mort House in Aberdeenshire, north-east Scotland

A mort house, ossuaries or dead house was used to store bones (usually skulls and femurs) gleaned from graves a year or two after burial. They are common throughout northern Europe. They usually predate any graverobbing periods and indeed serve to purpose in relation to graverobbing as they stored bones not bodies.

Up to 31 recorded mort houses were scattered throughout Scotland and northern England.[27] Usually these structures were built within or near cemeteries to make transportation easier. Prior to grave robbers, they were used to store dead bodies in the winter, being that the ground was too cold and in some cases impossible to dig into. An example is the Udny Mort House built in 1832, Aberdeenshire, north-east Scotland and still standing today.

Coffin collars

The coffin collar was an iron collar often fixed to a piece of wood.[28] It was fixed around the neck of a corpse and then bolted to the bottom of a coffin. Most common reports of these collars being used came from Scotland around the 1820s.

Family mausoleums

 
The Freeland Mausoleum at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts

Mausolea do not play a major role in the history of graverobbing and are largely built as a display of wealth rather than security.

Historically mausoleums have been used as a sign of a family's wealth and a symbol of gentry and nobility in many countries. In the mid and late 19th century in North America, more and more families began to buy mausoleums. The belief was that it would be easier for a Resurrectionist or grave robber to dig up a grave rather than to topple down iron or steel doors guarding the mausoleum. A flaw in the design of the mausoleum was the stained glass or other windows within. Almost every family between the 18th and 19th century had a religious affiliation. As such, many of these families (usually with a Christian affiliation) would put stained glass within the mausoleums. The grave robbers would then just have to smash the glass to break in and to retrieve the body. Making it even easier, around the 1830s families began to fear burying family members. To remedy this, families would put a spare key somewhere within the mausoleum[29] and create doors with two way locks. In short, grave robbers could break a window, recover the body, find the key, and walk straight out the front door of the mausoleum.

Cemetery Vaults

Unlike mausolea, cemetery vaults did play a functional role in protection against graverobbing. These feature strongly in French and British layouts. Typically these would be a semi-enclosed stone structure with an ornamental cast iron access gate and usually plainer rails to the roof or sides.

Although the protective function of the vaults became redundant by 1840 most mid 19th century cemeteries continue to include vaults as a visual focal point in their layouts. This is often a critical point within overall composition.

Guards/guarding

One of the most simplistic and low-tech methods to prevent grave robbing were to have an individual guard over the newly buried body. This was done until decomposition of the body was brought to a point where they would no longer be desirable for medical use. If families did not have enough money to hire an individual to watch over the grave for a select number of days, the family would delegate this duty amongst them and close friends. As grave robbing became a lucrative business in the 19th century, a bribe would convince some guards to look the other way.[30]

In Scotland, construction of guard towers became common in the late 18th century, usually in a position overlooking most of the burial ground.

Deception

Within the Great Pyramid of Giza (completed around 2560 BC),[31] an Egyptian deterrent system was built to guard the tomb of Pharaoh Khufu. This system consists of blocks and grooves to protect the King's Chamber from tomb robbers. Some experts believe that Pharaoh Khufu's tomb has actually not been found because of the deterrent system; instead, what had been found by grave robbers were fake chambers.[32]

See also

Notes and references

Notes
  1. ^ Daniel (1950), p. 11
  2. ^ Atwood (2004), p. 9
  3. ^ Atwood (2004), p. 10
  4. ^ Huffer, Damien; University, Stockholm; Graham, Shawn (2017). "The Insta-Dead: The rhetoric of the human remains trade on Instagram". Internet Archaeology (45). doi:10.11141/ia.45.5.
  5. ^ a b c d e Qin, Amy (July 15, 2017). "Tomb Robbing, Perilous but Alluring, Makes Comeback in China". New York Times.
  6. ^ Paul van Els (2018). The Wenzi: Creativity and Intertextuality in Early Chinese Philosophy. Studies in the History of Chinese Texts. Brill. p. 12.
  7. ^ Ryan, Donald P. "Further Observations Concerning the Valley of the Kings". Pacific Lutheran University. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
  8. ^ "Tombs hidden in Valley of the Kings hold many more Egypt mummy mysteries". NBC News. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
  9. ^ Gardiner (2007), p. 147
  10. ^ Gardiner (2007), p. 244
  11. ^ Mueller, Tom (June 2016). "How Tomb Raiders Are Stealing Our History". National Geographic.
  12. ^ Shelton (1998), p. 95
  13. ^ a b Kraske, Marion (21 December 2007). "Bulgaria Plagued by 'Grave Robbers'". Spiegel Online. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  14. ^ "In touch with the dead". Leiden University. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
  15. ^ "Rise of the Nazi-Grave Robbers". Bloomberg Businessweek. 23 August 2016. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  16. ^ "Grave robbing ghouls who trade in Nazi relics". Sunday Express. 8 September 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  17. ^ Craughwell (2007)
  18. ^ Keith Verinese: "The Adventures of Abraham Lincoln's Corpse:" http://io9.com/S898746/the-adventures-of-abraham-lincolns-corpse[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ "History of African-American Cemeteries". www.sciway.net. Retrieved 31 July 2016.
  20. ^ Waite, Frederick C. (1945). "Grave robbing in New England". Bulletin of the Medical Library Association. Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen County. 33 (3): 272–294. PMC 194496. PMID 16016694.
  21. ^ Richardson, Ruth (2000). Death, Dissection and the Destitute (2 ed. with a new afterword. ed.). Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226712406.
  22. ^ Humphrey, DC (September 1973). "Dissection and Discrimination: the Social Origins of Cadavers in America, 1760-1915". Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine. 49 (9): 819–27. PMC 1807060. PMID 4582559.
  23. ^ Moore, Wendy (2005). The Knife Man : Blood, Body Snatching, and the Birth of Modern Surgery (1st pbk. ed.). New York: Broadway Books. ISBN 0767916530.
  24. ^ "Mount Auburn Cemetery". mountauburn.org.
  25. ^ "Mount Auburn Cemetery--Massachusetts Conservation: A Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  26. ^ Lennox, Suzie (2016-09-30). Bodysnatchers: Digging Up The Untold Stories of Britain's Resurrection Men. Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Pen and Sword History. p. 39,65. ISBN 9781473866577.
  27. ^ Gorman, Martyn. "Map Showing the Distribution of Morthouses in Scottish Graveyards". www.abdn.ac.uk. University of Aberdeen. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
  28. ^ "National Museums of Scotland - Coffin Collar". nms.scran.ac.uk. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 March 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  30. ^ Davis, Lauren. "8 Ways to Keep Body Snatchers from Stealing Your Corpse". Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  31. ^ "The Great Pyramid of Giza: Last Remaining Wonder of the Ancient World". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  32. ^ Jarus, Owen (11 July 2016). "'Primitive Machine' Within Great Pyramid of Giza Reconstructed". Live Science. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
References
  1. ^ All three long-used terms bear their plain (natural) meaning, specifically that robbing and raiding in this context mean stealing. In English, Welsh and Scottish law "to rob"/"robbery" is limited to an intentional threat or attack against a person so as to steal - i.e. some form of assault or battery. In more common colloquial use the term "rob" is also used transitively with any type of place meaning to steal from. This means that, internationally, stealing of coffins/urns containing remains, components of these items or taking bodies from their proper, intended final resting place is also caught by the term

Bibliography

  • Atwood, Roger (2004), Stealing History, Tomb Raiders, Smugglers, and the Looting of the Ancient World, New York City: St. Martin's Press
  • Daniel, Glyn (1950), A Hundred and Fifty Years of Archaeology, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press
  • Gardiner, Alan (2007) [1961], The Egyptians: An Introduction, Oxford: Oxford University Press (The Folio Society)
  • Peters, Bernard C. (1997), "Indian-Grave Robbing at Sault Ste. Marie, 1826.", The Michigan Historical Review, vol. 23, no. 2
  • Shelton, Jo-Ann (1998), As the Romans Did (2nd ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press
  • Craughwell, Thomas (2007), Stealing Lincoln's Body, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press
  • Peet, T. E. (1930), The great Tomb-Robberies of the Twentieth Egyptian Dynasty, Oxford.
  • Redman, Samuel (2016), Bone Rooms: From Scientific Racism to Human Prehistory in Museums, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press
  • Lennox, Suzie (2016-09-30), Bodysnatchers: Digging Up The Untold Stories of Britain's Resurrection Men, Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Pen and Sword History, p. 39,65, ISBN 9781473866577

grave, robbery, grave, robber, redirects, here, other, uses, grave, robber, disambiguation, tomb, robbing, tomb, raiding, uncovering, grave, tomb, crypt, steal, commodities, usually, perpetrated, take, profit, from, valuable, artefacts, personal, property, rel. Grave robber redirects here For other uses see Grave Robber disambiguation Grave robbery tomb robbing or tomb raiding is the act of uncovering a grave tomb or crypt to steal commodities It is usually perpetrated to take and profit from valuable artefacts or personal property n 1 A related act is body snatching a term denoting the contested or unlawful taking of a body seldom from a grave which can be extended to the unlawful taking of organs alone Hole that was dug by looters in Chan Chan Peru Grave robbing has caused great difficulty to the studies of archaeology art history and history 1 2 Countless precious grave sites and tombs have been robbed before scholars were able to examine them In any way the archaeological context and the historical and anthropological information are destroyed Looting obliterates the memory of the ancient world and turns its highest artistic creations into decorations adornments on a shelf divorced from historical context and ultimately from all meaning 3 Grave robbers who are not caught usually sell relatively modern items anonymously and artifacts on the black market Those intercepted in a public justice domain are inclined to deny their guilt Though some artifacts may make their way to museums or scholars the majority end up in private collections 4 Contents 1 Effects on archaeology around the world 1 1 China 1 2 Egypt 1 3 Classical Antiquity 1 4 Europe 1 5 North America 1 6 Central America 2 Race 2 1 African Americans 3 Deterrents 3 1 Geography 3 2 Mortsafes 3 3 Mort houses 3 4 Coffin collars 3 5 Family mausoleums 3 6 Cemetery Vaults 3 7 Guards guarding 3 8 Deception 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 BibliographyEffects on archaeology around the world EditChina Edit Grave robbing in China is a practice stretching back to antiquity the classic Chinese text Lushi Chunqiu dating to the 2nd century BCE advised readers to plan simple burials to discourage looting 5 The presence of jade burial suits and other valuables in tombs were powerful temptations to rob graves 6 In modern China grave robbing has been perpetrated by both amateurs such as farmers and migrant laborers and by professional thieves associated with transnational criminal networks 5 The practice reached epidemic proportions in the 1980s as the development and construction boom following the Chinese economic reform led to many archaeological sites being revealed 5 Other peaks of tomb robbing occurred in the early 2000s and in the 2010s when the plunder of graves was on the upswing due to an increase in global and domestic demand and prices for Chinese antiquities 5 The provinces of Henan Shaanxi and Shanxi were particularly affected by tomb robbing 5 Egypt Edit Ancient Egyptian tombs are one of the most common examples of tomb or grave robbery Most of the tombs in Egypt s Valley of the Kings were robbed within one hundred years of their sealing 7 8 including the tomb of the famous King Tutankhamen which was raided at least twice before it was discovered in 1922 9 As most of the artifacts in these ancient burial sites have been discovered it is through the conditions of the tombs and presumed articles that are missing in which historians and archaeologists are able to determine whether the tomb has been robbed Egyptian pharaohs often kept records of the precious items in their tombs so an inventory check is presumed for archaeologists 10 Oftentimes warnings would be left by the Pharaohs in the tombs of calamities and curses that would be laid upon any who touched the treasure or the bodies which did little to deter grave robbers There are many examples of grave robbing in the Ancient World outside of Egypt 11 Classical Antiquity Edit The Romans Byzantium also suffered decades of theft and destruction of tombs crypts and graves 12 Europe Edit In parts of Europe graves are robbed on an accelerating and alarming scale Many grave robbers work with metal detectors and some of the groups are organised criminals feeding the black market with highly prized archaeological artifacts 13 Merovingian graves in France and Germany and Anglo Saxon graves in England contain many metal grave goods mostly of iron Grave robbers often leave them being only interested in gold and silver Grave contexts ceramics iron weapons and skeletons are typically destroyed in the process 14 In Eastern Europe including Southeast Europe and the European part of Russia grave robbers target all kinds of historically important graves from prehistoric tombs to World War II graves 15 16 13 North America Edit Modern grave robbing in North America also involves long abandoned or forgotten private Antebellum Period to pre Great Depression era grave sites These sites are often desecrated by grave robbers in search of old hence valuable jewelry Affected sites are typically in rural forested areas where once prominent wealthy landowners and their families were interred The remote and often undocumented locations of defunct private cemeteries make them particularly susceptible to grave robbery The practice may be encouraged by default upon the discovery of a previously unknown family cemetery by a new landowner One notable historical incident occurred during the evening of November 7 1876 when a group of counterfeiters attempted to steal Abraham Lincoln s body from his grave in Springfield Illinois in an attempt to secure the release of their imprisoned leader counterfeit engraver Benjamin Boyd However a Secret Service agent was present and had notified the police beforehand so the grave robbers only succeeded in dislodging the lid of his coffin As a consequence when Lincoln was reburied additional security measures were implemented to prevent further grave robbery attempts 17 18 Central America Edit Grave robbers often sold stolen Aztec or Mayan goods on the black market for an extremely high price The buyers museum curators historians etc didn t often suffer the repercussions of being in possession of stolen goods the blame and charges were placed upon the lower class grave robbers Today s antiquities trade has become a streamlined industry the speed at which these artifacts enter the market has grown exponentially Laws to prevent grave robbing have been enacted in these regions but due to extreme poverty these grave robberies continue to grow each year Race EditAfrican Americans Edit Leonard Medical School Graduating Class of 1889 Enslaved and free blacks immigrants and the poor were frequently the target of grave robbing Edward C Halperin African Americans would often be compelled to bury their dead in a potter s field not having the access or money for a proper funeral When buried in potter s fields the dead were not normally buried very deeply A grave robber could wait discreetly in the distance until nobody else was in sight then quickly and easily disinter the body from its shallow resting place 19 Once the railroad was invented and tracks laid the sale of the bodies of African American slaves from the South for dissection began in earnest The bodies were robbed from graves by night doctors and shipped to medical schools in the northern part of the United States One New England anatomy professor reported that in the 1880s and 1890s he entered into an arrangement in which he received twice each semester a shipment of 12 bodies of southern African Americans They came in barrels labeled as containing turpentine and were shipped to a local hardware store that dealt in painting materials 20 State laws in Mississippi and North Carolina were passed in the 19th century which allowed medical schools to use the remains of those at the bottom of society s hierarchy the unclaimed bodies of poor persons and residents of almshouses and those buried in potter s fields for anatomical study 21 22 The option to dissect Confederate soldiers was also available as Mississippi and North Carolina legally released those bodies to the families of the deceased The North Carolina law also provided that the bodies of whites never be sent to an African American medical college such as the Leonard Medical School These African American medical schools typically obtained unclaimed Black potter s field bodies 23 Deterrents EditGeography Edit Examples of the terrain within Mount Auburn Cemetery The geography and placement of burial grounds became a deterrent within itself This is because without the accessibility of the automobile in the early 19th century the transportation of bodies was difficult A perfect example of this is Mount Auburn Cemetery 24 in Cambridge Massachusetts It was the first rural cemetery inside the United States The rural location of the cemetery created transportation issues In addition the terrain of and around the cemetery was formidable Further Henry Alexander Scammell Dearborn the designer wanted to leave the natural terrain including ponds and hills within the cemetery If someone wanted to rob a grave they would have to maneuver around these obstacles and navigate large stretches of land in the dark Note that Mount Auburn Cemetery is over 175 acres 25 Other cemeteries of the time that were originally built away from populated areas for similar reasons include Mount Hope Cemetery in Bangor Maine 1834 Laurel Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia Pennsylvania 1836 Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Taunton Massachusetts 1836 Mount Hope Cemetery in Rochester New York 1838 Green Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn New York 1838 and Green Mount Cemetery in Baltimore Maryland 1838 Mortsafes Edit Mortsafes at Logeriat Church in Perthshire Scotland A mortsafe or mort safe was an iron coffin or framework which helped to protect a grave by preventing the body from being dug up and taken away Mortsafes were specific for the task of preventing bodies from being stolen for purposes of medical dissections 26 Other variants included movable stone slabs capable of being hoisted over the fresh grave All work on the principle of greatly increasing the required time for criminals to access the grave These deterrents used commonly in Scotland would be rented from the sexton until the body decomposed and were used on a circulating basis At the creation of the Dissections Act the purpose became redundant and they were left where last used sometimes being incorporated into the grave marker by addition of inscription Mort houses Edit Udny Mort House in Aberdeenshire north east Scotland A mort house ossuaries or dead house was used to store bones usually skulls and femurs gleaned from graves a year or two after burial They are common throughout northern Europe They usually predate any graverobbing periods and indeed serve to purpose in relation to graverobbing as they stored bones not bodies Up to 31 recorded mort houses were scattered throughout Scotland and northern England 27 Usually these structures were built within or near cemeteries to make transportation easier Prior to grave robbers they were used to store dead bodies in the winter being that the ground was too cold and in some cases impossible to dig into An example is the Udny Mort House built in 1832 Aberdeenshire north east Scotland and still standing today Coffin collars Edit The coffin collar was an iron collar often fixed to a piece of wood 28 It was fixed around the neck of a corpse and then bolted to the bottom of a coffin Most common reports of these collars being used came from Scotland around the 1820s Family mausoleums Edit The Freeland Mausoleum at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge Massachusetts Mausolea do not play a major role in the history of graverobbing and are largely built as a display of wealth rather than security Historically mausoleums have been used as a sign of a family s wealth and a symbol of gentry and nobility in many countries In the mid and late 19th century in North America more and more families began to buy mausoleums The belief was that it would be easier for a Resurrectionist or grave robber to dig up a grave rather than to topple down iron or steel doors guarding the mausoleum A flaw in the design of the mausoleum was the stained glass or other windows within Almost every family between the 18th and 19th century had a religious affiliation As such many of these families usually with a Christian affiliation would put stained glass within the mausoleums The grave robbers would then just have to smash the glass to break in and to retrieve the body Making it even easier around the 1830s families began to fear burying family members To remedy this families would put a spare key somewhere within the mausoleum 29 and create doors with two way locks In short grave robbers could break a window recover the body find the key and walk straight out the front door of the mausoleum Cemetery Vaults Edit Unlike mausolea cemetery vaults did play a functional role in protection against graverobbing These feature strongly in French and British layouts Typically these would be a semi enclosed stone structure with an ornamental cast iron access gate and usually plainer rails to the roof or sides Although the protective function of the vaults became redundant by 1840 most mid 19th century cemeteries continue to include vaults as a visual focal point in their layouts This is often a critical point within overall composition Guards guarding Edit One of the most simplistic and low tech methods to prevent grave robbing were to have an individual guard over the newly buried body This was done until decomposition of the body was brought to a point where they would no longer be desirable for medical use If families did not have enough money to hire an individual to watch over the grave for a select number of days the family would delegate this duty amongst them and close friends As grave robbing became a lucrative business in the 19th century a bribe would convince some guards to look the other way 30 In Scotland construction of guard towers became common in the late 18th century usually in a position overlooking most of the burial ground Deception Edit Within the Great Pyramid of Giza completed around 2560 BC 31 an Egyptian deterrent system was built to guard the tomb of Pharaoh Khufu This system consists of blocks and grooves to protect the King s Chamber from tomb robbers Some experts believe that Pharaoh Khufu s tomb has actually not been found because of the deterrent system instead what had been found by grave robbers were fake chambers 32 See also EditBody snatching Nighthawking Speyer wine bottle Tomb of Lepejou Treasure huntingNotes and references EditNotes Daniel 1950 p 11 Atwood 2004 p 9 Atwood 2004 p 10 Huffer Damien University Stockholm Graham Shawn 2017 The Insta Dead The rhetoric of the human remains trade on Instagram Internet Archaeology 45 doi 10 11141 ia 45 5 a b c d e Qin Amy July 15 2017 Tomb Robbing Perilous but Alluring Makes Comeback in China New York Times Paul van Els 2018 The Wenzi Creativity and Intertextuality in Early Chinese Philosophy Studies in the History of Chinese Texts Brill p 12 Ryan Donald P Further Observations Concerning the Valley of the Kings Pacific Lutheran University Retrieved 22 May 2022 Tombs hidden in Valley of the Kings hold many more Egypt mummy mysteries NBC News Retrieved 22 May 2022 Gardiner 2007 p 147 Gardiner 2007 p 244 Mueller Tom June 2016 How Tomb Raiders Are Stealing Our History National Geographic Shelton 1998 p 95 a b Kraske Marion 21 December 2007 Bulgaria Plagued by Grave Robbers Spiegel Online Retrieved 10 December 2017 In touch with the dead Leiden University Retrieved 22 May 2022 Rise of the Nazi Grave Robbers Bloomberg Businessweek 23 August 2016 Retrieved 10 December 2017 Grave robbing ghouls who trade in Nazi relics Sunday Express 8 September 2012 Retrieved 10 December 2017 Craughwell 2007 Keith Verinese The Adventures of Abraham Lincoln s Corpse http io9 com S898746 the adventures of abraham lincolns corpse permanent dead link History of African American Cemeteries www sciway net Retrieved 31 July 2016 Waite Frederick C 1945 Grave robbing in New England Bulletin of the Medical Library Association Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen County 33 3 272 294 PMC 194496 PMID 16016694 Richardson Ruth 2000 Death Dissection and the Destitute 2 ed with a new afterword ed Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226712406 Humphrey DC September 1973 Dissection and Discrimination the Social Origins of Cadavers in America 1760 1915 Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine 49 9 819 27 PMC 1807060 PMID 4582559 Moore Wendy 2005 The Knife Man Blood Body Snatching and the Birth of Modern Surgery 1st pbk ed New York Broadway Books ISBN 0767916530 Mount Auburn Cemetery mountauburn org Mount Auburn Cemetery Massachusetts Conservation A Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary www nps gov Retrieved 30 July 2016 Lennox Suzie 2016 09 30 Bodysnatchers Digging Up The Untold Stories of Britain s Resurrection Men Barnsley South Yorkshire Pen and Sword History p 39 65 ISBN 9781473866577 Gorman Martyn Map Showing the Distribution of Morthouses in Scottish Graveyards www abdn ac uk University of Aberdeen Retrieved 5 August 2016 National Museums of Scotland Coffin Collar nms scran ac uk Retrieved 30 July 2016 Mausoleum Locks 19th amp 20th century Archived from the original on 26 March 2015 Retrieved 30 July 2016 Davis Lauren 8 Ways to Keep Body Snatchers from Stealing Your Corpse Retrieved 6 August 2016 The Great Pyramid of Giza Last Remaining Wonder of the Ancient World World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 6 August 2016 Jarus Owen 11 July 2016 Primitive Machine Within Great Pyramid of Giza Reconstructed Live Science Retrieved 6 August 2016 References All three long used terms bear their plain natural meaning specifically that robbing and raiding in this context mean stealing In English Welsh and Scottish law to rob robbery is limited to an intentional threat or attack against a person so as to steal i e some form of assault or battery In more common colloquial use the term rob is also used transitively with any type of place meaning to steal from This means that internationally stealing of coffins urns containing remains components of these items or taking bodies from their proper intended final resting place is also caught by the termBibliography EditAtwood Roger 2004 Stealing History Tomb Raiders Smugglers and the Looting of the Ancient World New York City St Martin s Press Daniel Glyn 1950 A Hundred and Fifty Years of Archaeology Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press Gardiner Alan 2007 1961 The Egyptians An Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press The Folio Society Peters Bernard C 1997 Indian Grave Robbing at Sault Ste Marie 1826 The Michigan Historical Review vol 23 no 2 Shelton Jo Ann 1998 As the Romans Did 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press Craughwell Thomas 2007 Stealing Lincoln s Body Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press Peet T E 1930 The great Tomb Robberies of the Twentieth Egyptian Dynasty Oxford Redman Samuel 2016 Bone Rooms From Scientific Racism to Human Prehistory in Museums Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University PressLennox Suzie 2016 09 30 Bodysnatchers Digging Up The Untold Stories of Britain s Resurrection Men Barnsley South Yorkshire Pen and Sword History p 39 65 ISBN 9781473866577 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grave robbery amp oldid 1145059917, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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