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Headstone

A headstone, tombstone, or gravestone is a stele or marker, usually stone, that is placed over a grave. It is traditional for burials in the Christian, Jewish, and Muslim religions, among others. In most cases, it has the deceased's name, date of birth, and date of death inscribed on it, along with a personal message, or prayer, but may contain pieces of funerary art, especially details in stone relief. In many parts of Europe, insetting a photograph of the deceased in a frame is very common.

Captain Andrew Drake (1684–1743) sandstone gravestone from the Stelton Baptist Church in Edison, New Jersey

Use edit

 
Marble headstone of a couple buried together in Singapore, showing an arched emblem, signifying the reunification with one's partner in heaven. Within the arch is a statue of Jesus Christ

The stele (plural: stelae), as it is called in an archaeological context, is one of the oldest forms of funerary art. Originally, a tombstone was the stone lid of a stone coffin, or the coffin itself, and a gravestone was the stone slab (or ledger stone) that was laid flat over a grave. Now, all three terms ("stele", "tombstone" or "gravestone") are also used for markers set (usually upright) at the head of the grave. Some graves in the 18th century also contained footstones to demarcate the foot end of the grave. This sometimes developed into full kerb sets that marked the whole perimeter of the grave. Footstones were rarely annotated with more than the deceased's initials and year of death, and sometimes a memorial mason and plot reference number. Many cemeteries and churchyards have removed those extra stones to ease grass cutting by machine mower. In some UK cemeteries, the principal, and indeed only, marker is placed at the foot of the grave.

Owing to soil movement and downhill creep on gentle slopes, older headstones and footstones can often be found tilted at an angle. Over time, this movement can result in the stones being sited several metres away from their original location.[citation needed]

Graves and any related memorials are a focus for mourning and remembrance. The names of relatives are often added to a gravestone over the years, so that one marker may chronicle the passing of an entire family spread over decades. Since gravestones and a plot in a cemetery or churchyard cost money, they are also a symbol of wealth or prominence in a community. Some gravestones were even commissioned and erected to their own memory by people who were still living, as a testament to their wealth and status. In a Christian context, the very wealthy often erected elaborate memorials within churches rather than having simply external gravestones. Crematoria frequently offer similar alternatives to families who do not have a grave to mark, but who want a focus for their mourning and for remembrance. Carved or cast commemorative plaques inside the crematorium for example may serve this purpose.

Materials edit

 
A tombstone at the grave of Paavo Ruotsalainen (1777–1852) in Nilsiä, Kuopio, Finland

A cemetery may follow national codes of practice or independently prescribe the size and use of certain materials, especially in a conservation area. Some may limit the placing of a wooden memorial to six months after burial, after which a more permanent memorial must be placed. Others may require stones of a certain shape or position to facilitate grass-cutting. Headstones of granite, marble and other kinds of stone are usually created, installed, and repaired by monumental masons. Cemeteries require regular inspection and maintenance, as stones may settle, topple and, on rare occasions, fall and injure people;[1] or graves may simply become overgrown and their markers lost or vandalised.

Restoration is a specialized job for a monumental mason. Even overgrowth removal requires care to avoid damaging the carving. For example, ivy should only be cut at the base roots and left to naturally die off, never pulled off forcefully. Many materials have been used as markers.

Stone edit

  • Fieldstones. In many cultures markers for graves other than enclosed areas, such as planted with characteristic plants particularly in northern Europe the yew, were natural fieldstones, some unmarked and others decorated or incised using a metal awl. Typical motifs for the carving included a symbol and the deceased's name and age.
  • Granite. Granite is a hard stone and requires skill to carve by hand. Modern methods of carving include using computer-controlled rotary bits and sandblasting over a rubber stencil. Leaving the letters, numbers and emblems exposed on the stone, the blaster can create virtually any kind of artwork or epitaph.
  • Marble and limestone. Both limestone and marble take carving well. Marble is a recrystallised form of limestone. The mild acid in rainwater can slowly dissolve marble and limestone over time, which can make inscriptions unreadable. Portland stone was a type of limestone commonly used in England – after weathering, fossiliferous deposits tend to appear on the surface. Marble became popular from the early 19th century, though its extra cost limited its appeal.
  • Sandstone. Sandstone is durable, yet soft enough to carve easily. Some sandstone markers are so well preserved that individual chisel marks are discernible, while others have delaminated and crumbled to dust. Delamination occurs when moisture gets between the layers of the sandstone. As it freezes and expands the layers flake off. In the 17th century, sandstone replaced field stones in Colonial America. Yorkstone was a common sandstone material used in England.
  • Slate. Slate can have a pleasing texture but is slightly porous and prone to delamination. Slate was commonly used by colonial New England carvers, especially in Boston where elaborate slate markers were shipped down the Atlantic coast as far south as Charleston and Savanah. It takes lettering well, often highlighted with white paint or gilding.
  • Schist. Schist Was a common material for grave making in the American Colonies during the 17th and 18th Century. While harder to Carve than Sandstone or Slate, lettering and symbols usually had to be carved deeper into the stone and therefore held up well over long periods of time. While not as durable as most slate, most have held up well against the elements.

Metal, wood and plants edit

 
Grave Marker, Gwa'sala Kwakwaka'wakw (Native American), late 19th century, wood, pigment, Brooklyn Museum
 
Wood grave marker using Canadian Syllabics
 
Iron cross on a grave in Ekshärad cemetery
 
Wooden grave markers stored at Heidal Church, Norway
  • Iron. Iron grave markers and decorations were popular during the Victorian era in the United Kingdom and elsewhere, often being produced by specialist foundries or the local blacksmith. Cast iron headstones have lasted for generations while wrought ironwork often only survives in a rusted or eroded state. In eastern Värmland, Sweden, iron crosses instead of stones have been popular since the 18th century.
  • White bronze. Actually sand cast zinc, but called white bronze for marketing purposes. Almost all, if not all, zinc grave markers were made by the Monumental Bronze Company of Bridgeport, CT, between 1874 and 1914. The company set up subsidiaries in Detroit, Philadelphia, New Orleans, and Des Moines; a Chicago subsidiary was named the American Bronze Company, while the St. Thomas White Bronze Monument Company was set up in Ontario, Canada.[3] They are in cemeteries of the period all across the U.S. and Canada. They were sold as more durable than marble, about 1/3 less expensive and progressive.
  • Wood. This was a popular material during the Georgian and Victorian era, and almost certainly before, in Great Britain and elsewhere. Some could be very ornate, although few survive beyond 50–100 years due to natural decomposition or termites and other wood boring insects.
  • Planting. Trees or shrubs, particularly roses, may be planted, especially to mark the location of ashes. This may be accompanied by a small inscribed metal or wooden marker.

Inscriptions edit

Markers sometimes bear inscriptions. The information on the headstone generally includes the name of the deceased and their date of birth and death. Such information can be useful to genealogists and local historians. Larger cemeteries may require a discreet reference code as well to help accurately fix the location for maintenance. The cemetery owner, church, or, as in the UK, national guidelines might encourage the use of 'tasteful' and accurate wording in inscriptions. The placement of inscriptions is traditionally placed on the forward-facing side of the memorial but can also be seen in some cases on the reverse and around the edges of the stone itself. Some families request that an inscription be made on the portion of the memorial that will be underground.[4]

In addition, some gravestones also bear epitaphs in praise of the deceased or quotations from religious texts, such as "requiescat in pace". In a few instances the inscription is in the form of a plea, admonishment, testament of faith, claim to fame or even a curse – William Shakespeare's inscription famously declares

Good friend, for Jesus' sake forbear,
To dig the dust enclosèd here.
Blest be the man that spares these stones,
And cursed be he that moves my bones.

Or a warning about mortality, such as this Persian poetry carved on an ancient tombstone in the Tajiki capital of Dushanbe.[5]

 
Gravestone in Canada with indigenous language inscription in Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics

I heard that mighty Jamshed the King
Carved on a stone near a spring of water these words:
"Many – like us – sat here by this spring
And left this life in the blink of an eye.
We captured the whole world through our courage and strength,
Yet could take nothing with us to our grave."

Or a simpler warning of inevitability of death:

 
Hebrew inscriptions on gravestones in Sobědruhy, Czech Republic

Remember me as you pass by,
As you are now, so once was I,
As I am now, so you will be,
Prepare for death and follow me.

 
Multilingual gravestone in Llangybi, Gwynedd, Wales: Welsh, English, French
 
Gurkha soldier's stone in Singapore
 
Serbian women's stone in Gornja Gorevnica, Serbia
 
Information in English, Bible verse in German (Dallas, TX)

Headstone engravers faced their own "year 2000 problem" when still-living people, as many as 500,000 in the United States alone, pre-purchased headstones with pre-carved death years beginning with 19–.[6]

Bas-relief carvings of a religious nature or of a profile of the deceased can be seen on some headstones, especially up to the 19th century. Since the invention of photography, a gravestone might include a framed photograph or cameo of the deceased; photographic images or artwork (showing the loved one, or some other image relevant to their life, interests or achievements) are sometimes now engraved onto smooth stone surfaces.

Some headstones use lettering made of white metal fixed into the stone, which is easy to read but can be damaged by ivy or frost. Deep carvings on a hard-wearing stone may weather many centuries exposed in graveyards and still remain legible. Those fixed on the inside of churches, on the walls, or on the floor (often as near the altar as possible) may last much longer: such memorials were often embellished with a monumental brass.

The choice of language and/or script on gravestones has been studied by sociolinguists as indicators of language choices and language loyalty. For example, by studying cemeteries used by immigrant communities,[7] some languages were found to be carved "long after the language ceased to be spoken" in the communities.[8] In other cases, a language used in the inscription may indicate a religious affiliation.

Marker inscriptions have also been used for political purposes, such as the grave marker installed in January 2008 at Cave Hill Cemetery in Louisville, Kentucky by Mathew Prescott, an employee of PETA. The grave marker is located near the grave of KFC founder Harland Sanders and bears the acrostic message "KFC tortures birds".[9] The group placed its grave marker to promote its contention that KFC is cruel to chickens.

Form and decoration edit

 
Typical Death’s Head design, often used on tombstones in Colonial America (Boston MA)
 
An equestrian motif on an 11th-century Swedish gravestone
 
Islamic cemetery in Sarajevo, with columnar headstones

Gravestones may be simple upright slabs with semi-circular, rounded, gabled, pointed-arched, pedimental, square or other shaped tops. During the 18th century, they were often decorated with memento mori (symbolic reminders of death) such as skulls or winged skulls, winged cherub heads, heavenly crowns, or the picks and shovels of the gravedigger. Somewhat unusual were more elaborate allegorical figures, such as Old Father Time, or emblems of trade or status, or even some event from the life of the deceased (particularly how they died). Large tomb chests, false sarcophagi as the actual remains were in the earth below, or smaller coped chests were commonly used by the gentry as a means of commemorating a number of members of the same family. In the 19th century, headstone styles became very diverse, ranging from plain to highly decorated, and often using crosses on a base or other shapes differing from the traditional slab. By this time popular designs were shifting from symbols of death like Winged heads and Skulls to Urns and Willow trees. Marble also became overwhelmingly popular as a grave material during the 1800s in the United States. More elaborately carved markers, such as crosses or angels also became popular during this time. Simple curb surrounds, sometimes filled with glass chippings, were popular during the mid-20th century.

Islamic headstones are traditionally more a rectangular upright shaft, often topped with a carved topknot symbolic of a turban; but in Western countries more local styles are often used.

Some form of simple decoration may be employed.[10] Special emblems on tombstones indicate several familiar themes in many faiths. Some examples are:

Greek letters might also be used:

  •   (alpha and omega): The beginning and the end
  •   (chi rho): The first letters spelling the name of Christ

Safety edit

Over time a headstone may settle or its fixings weaken. After several instances where unstable stones have fallen in dangerous circumstances, some burial authorities "topple test" headstones by firm pressure to check for stability. They may then tape them off or flatten them.

This procedure has proved controversial in the UK, where an authority's duty of care to protect visitors is complicated because it often does not have any ownership rights over the dangerous marker. Authorities that have knocked over stones during testing or have unilaterally lifted and laid flat any potentially hazardous stones have been criticised, after grieving relatives have discovered that their relative's marker has been moved.[11] Since 2007 Consistory Court and local authority guidance now restricts the force used in a topple test and requires an authority to consult relatives before moving a stone. In addition, before laying a stone flat, it must be recorded for posterity.[12][13]

Image gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 June 2007.
  2. ^ Bonello, Giovanni (2000). "Histories of Malta, Volume 1". Fondazzjoni Patrimonju Malti. ISBN 978-9993210016. pp. 9–11.
  3. ^ Jarvis, Dale Gilbert; Drover, Kelly (2018). "A Survey of White Bronze Mortuary Monuments in St. Johns's". The Newfoundland Ancestor. 34 (1): 27–38.
  4. ^ Fergus Wessell. . Archived from the original on 7 July 2013. Retrieved 5 September 2013.
  5. ^ Robert Fisk: "An urge to smash history into tiny pieces" 15 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Independent, 8 September 2007
  6. ^ Lynch, Michael W. (July 1999). "Grave Problem". Reason. from the original on 11 August 2014. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  7. ^ Doris Francis, Georgina Neophytu, Leonie Kellaher. 2005. The Secret Cemetery. Oxford: Berg.
  8. ^ p. 42. Kara VanDam. 2009. Dutch–American language shift: evidence from the grave. LACUS Forum XXXIV 33–42.
  9. ^ Bedard, Paul (10 January 2008). "PETA Takes Fight to Col. Sanders's Grave". Usnews.com. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  10. ^ Snider, Tui. Understanding cemetery symbols: a field guide for historic graveyards. Castle Azle Press, 2017.
  11. ^ National Federation of Cemetery Friends Safety in cemeteries guidance
  12. ^ Ecclesiastical Case Reports 12 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Re Keynsham Cemetery Gravestones
  13. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 September 2008.

External links edit

  • In Search Of Gravestones Old And Curious by W.T. Vincent, 1896, from Project Gutenberg
  • Azeri.org, Sofi Hamid Cemetery (in Azerbaijani)
  • World Burial Index 8 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine Photographs of memorial inscriptions plus free surname search
  • A Very Grave Matter Old New England gravestones
  • Historic Headstones Online Project to transcribe content from historic headstones
  • Pennsylvania German tombstones 11 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  • includes gravestone imagery in New Jersey
  • How to clean a Grave marker by Ralf Heckenbach
  • Stone Quarries and Beyond
  • "Memorializing the Civil War Dead: Modernity and Corruption under the Grant Administration", by Bruce S. Elliott, in Markers XXVI, Association for Gravestone Studies, 2011, pp. 15–55. (Reprinted with permission of the "Association for Gravestone Studies". (Details the beginning of the mass production of cemetery stones and the increased use of the sand blast process.)

headstone, other, uses, disambiguation, tombstone, gravestone, redirect, here, city, arizona, tombstone, arizona, other, uses, tombstone, disambiguation, gravestone, disambiguation, headstone, tombstone, gravestone, stele, marker, usually, stone, that, placed,. For other uses see Headstone disambiguation Tombstone and Gravestone redirect here For the city in Arizona see Tombstone Arizona For other uses see Tombstone disambiguation and Gravestone disambiguation A headstone tombstone or gravestone is a stele or marker usually stone that is placed over a grave It is traditional for burials in the Christian Jewish and Muslim religions among others In most cases it has the deceased s name date of birth and date of death inscribed on it along with a personal message or prayer but may contain pieces of funerary art especially details in stone relief In many parts of Europe insetting a photograph of the deceased in a frame is very common Captain Andrew Drake 1684 1743 sandstone gravestone from the Stelton Baptist Church in Edison New Jersey Contents 1 Use 2 Materials 2 1 Stone 2 2 Metal wood and plants 3 Inscriptions 4 Form and decoration 5 Safety 6 Image gallery 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksUse edit nbsp Marble headstone of a couple buried together in Singapore showing an arched emblem signifying the reunification with one s partner in heaven Within the arch is a statue of Jesus ChristThe stele plural stelae as it is called in an archaeological context is one of the oldest forms of funerary art Originally a tombstone was the stone lid of a stone coffin or the coffin itself and a gravestone was the stone slab or ledger stone that was laid flat over a grave Now all three terms stele tombstone or gravestone are also used for markers set usually upright at the head of the grave Some graves in the 18th century also contained footstones to demarcate the foot end of the grave This sometimes developed into full kerb sets that marked the whole perimeter of the grave Footstones were rarely annotated with more than the deceased s initials and year of death and sometimes a memorial mason and plot reference number Many cemeteries and churchyards have removed those extra stones to ease grass cutting by machine mower In some UK cemeteries the principal and indeed only marker is placed at the foot of the grave Owing to soil movement and downhill creep on gentle slopes older headstones and footstones can often be found tilted at an angle Over time this movement can result in the stones being sited several metres away from their original location citation needed Graves and any related memorials are a focus for mourning and remembrance The names of relatives are often added to a gravestone over the years so that one marker may chronicle the passing of an entire family spread over decades Since gravestones and a plot in a cemetery or churchyard cost money they are also a symbol of wealth or prominence in a community Some gravestones were even commissioned and erected to their own memory by people who were still living as a testament to their wealth and status In a Christian context the very wealthy often erected elaborate memorials within churches rather than having simply external gravestones Crematoria frequently offer similar alternatives to families who do not have a grave to mark but who want a focus for their mourning and for remembrance Carved or cast commemorative plaques inside the crematorium for example may serve this purpose Materials edit nbsp A tombstone at the grave of Paavo Ruotsalainen 1777 1852 in Nilsia Kuopio FinlandA cemetery may follow national codes of practice or independently prescribe the size and use of certain materials especially in a conservation area Some may limit the placing of a wooden memorial to six months after burial after which a more permanent memorial must be placed Others may require stones of a certain shape or position to facilitate grass cutting Headstones of granite marble and other kinds of stone are usually created installed and repaired by monumental masons Cemeteries require regular inspection and maintenance as stones may settle topple and on rare occasions fall and injure people 1 or graves may simply become overgrown and their markers lost or vandalised Restoration is a specialized job for a monumental mason Even overgrowth removal requires care to avoid damaging the carving For example ivy should only be cut at the base roots and left to naturally die off never pulled off forcefully Many materials have been used as markers Stone edit Fieldstones In many cultures markers for graves other than enclosed areas such as planted with characteristic plants particularly in northern Europe the yew were natural fieldstones some unmarked and others decorated or incised using a metal awl Typical motifs for the carving included a symbol and the deceased s name and age Granite Granite is a hard stone and requires skill to carve by hand Modern methods of carving include using computer controlled rotary bits and sandblasting over a rubber stencil Leaving the letters numbers and emblems exposed on the stone the blaster can create virtually any kind of artwork or epitaph Marble and limestone Both limestone and marble take carving well Marble is a recrystallised form of limestone The mild acid in rainwater can slowly dissolve marble and limestone over time which can make inscriptions unreadable Portland stone was a type of limestone commonly used in England after weathering fossiliferous deposits tend to appear on the surface Marble became popular from the early 19th century though its extra cost limited its appeal Sandstone Sandstone is durable yet soft enough to carve easily Some sandstone markers are so well preserved that individual chisel marks are discernible while others have delaminated and crumbled to dust Delamination occurs when moisture gets between the layers of the sandstone As it freezes and expands the layers flake off In the 17th century sandstone replaced field stones in Colonial America Yorkstone was a common sandstone material used in England Slate Slate can have a pleasing texture but is slightly porous and prone to delamination Slate was commonly used by colonial New England carvers especially in Boston where elaborate slate markers were shipped down the Atlantic coast as far south as Charleston and Savanah It takes lettering well often highlighted with white paint or gilding Schist Schist Was a common material for grave making in the American Colonies during the 17th and 18th Century While harder to Carve than Sandstone or Slate lettering and symbols usually had to be carved deeper into the stone and therefore held up well over long periods of time While not as durable as most slate most have held up well against the elements nbsp The Maymunah Stone a tombstone with an Arabic inscription dated 1174 on a reused Roman marble block Now exhibited at the Gozo Museum of Archaeology in Malta 2 nbsp Slate gravestone of Josiah Leavitt 1679 1717 Hingham Center Cemetery Hingham Plymouth County Massachusetts nbsp Slate vestige of a Jewish gravestone depicting a tzedakah box Jewish cemetery in Otwock Karczew Anielin Poland nbsp Gravestone showing death date of 1639 Wormshill Kent England nbsp HIS LAST MESSAGE NO MORE WARS FOR ME A headstone in the Jerusalem British World War I Cemetery on Mount Scopus nbsp Elaborately carved grave slab at Shebbear Devon England showing a skull sprouting flowering shoots as a symbol of resurrection nbsp Tottering Victorian headstonesin Woolaton in Nottingham England nbsp Schist tombstone dated 1795 carved by Josiah Manning in Mansfield CTMetal wood and plants edit nbsp Grave Marker Gwa sala Kwakwaka wakw Native American late 19th century wood pigment Brooklyn Museum nbsp Wood grave marker using Canadian Syllabics nbsp Iron cross on a grave in Eksharad cemetery nbsp Wooden grave markers stored at Heidal Church NorwayIron Iron grave markers and decorations were popular during the Victorian era in the United Kingdom and elsewhere often being produced by specialist foundries or the local blacksmith Cast iron headstones have lasted for generations while wrought ironwork often only survives in a rusted or eroded state In eastern Varmland Sweden iron crosses instead of stones have been popular since the 18th century White bronze Actually sand cast zinc but called white bronze for marketing purposes Almost all if not all zinc grave markers were made by the Monumental Bronze Company of Bridgeport CT between 1874 and 1914 The company set up subsidiaries in Detroit Philadelphia New Orleans and Des Moines a Chicago subsidiary was named the American Bronze Company while the St Thomas White Bronze Monument Company was set up in Ontario Canada 3 They are in cemeteries of the period all across the U S and Canada They were sold as more durable than marble about 1 3 less expensive and progressive Wood This was a popular material during the Georgian and Victorian era and almost certainly before in Great Britain and elsewhere Some could be very ornate although few survive beyond 50 100 years due to natural decomposition or termites and other wood boring insects Planting Trees or shrubs particularly roses may be planted especially to mark the location of ashes This may be accompanied by a small inscribed metal or wooden marker Inscriptions editMarkers sometimes bear inscriptions The information on the headstone generally includes the name of the deceased and their date of birth and death Such information can be useful to genealogists and local historians Larger cemeteries may require a discreet reference code as well to help accurately fix the location for maintenance The cemetery owner church or as in the UK national guidelines might encourage the use of tasteful and accurate wording in inscriptions The placement of inscriptions is traditionally placed on the forward facing side of the memorial but can also be seen in some cases on the reverse and around the edges of the stone itself Some families request that an inscription be made on the portion of the memorial that will be underground 4 In addition some gravestones also bear epitaphs in praise of the deceased or quotations from religious texts such as requiescat in pace In a few instances the inscription is in the form of a plea admonishment testament of faith claim to fame or even a curse William Shakespeare s inscription famously declares Good friend for Jesus sake forbear To dig the dust enclosed here Blest be the man that spares these stones And cursed be he that moves my bones Or a warning about mortality such as this Persian poetry carved on an ancient tombstone in the Tajiki capital of Dushanbe 5 nbsp Gravestone in Canada with indigenous language inscription in Canadian Aboriginal SyllabicsI heard that mighty Jamshed the King Carved on a stone near a spring of water these words Many like us sat here by this spring And left this life in the blink of an eye We captured the whole world through our courage and strength Yet could take nothing with us to our grave Or a simpler warning of inevitability of death nbsp Hebrew inscriptions on gravestones in Sobedruhy Czech RepublicRemember me as you pass by As you are now so once was I As I am now so you will be Prepare for death and follow me nbsp Multilingual gravestone in Llangybi Gwynedd Wales Welsh English French nbsp Gurkha soldier s stone in Singapore nbsp Serbian women s stone in Gornja Gorevnica Serbia nbsp Information in English Bible verse in German Dallas TX Headstone engravers faced their own year 2000 problem when still living people as many as 500 000 in the United States alone pre purchased headstones with pre carved death years beginning with 19 6 Bas relief carvings of a religious nature or of a profile of the deceased can be seen on some headstones especially up to the 19th century Since the invention of photography a gravestone might include a framed photograph or cameo of the deceased photographic images or artwork showing the loved one or some other image relevant to their life interests or achievements are sometimes now engraved onto smooth stone surfaces Some headstones use lettering made of white metal fixed into the stone which is easy to read but can be damaged by ivy or frost Deep carvings on a hard wearing stone may weather many centuries exposed in graveyards and still remain legible Those fixed on the inside of churches on the walls or on the floor often as near the altar as possible may last much longer such memorials were often embellished with a monumental brass The choice of language and or script on gravestones has been studied by sociolinguists as indicators of language choices and language loyalty For example by studying cemeteries used by immigrant communities 7 some languages were found to be carved long after the language ceased to be spoken in the communities 8 In other cases a language used in the inscription may indicate a religious affiliation Marker inscriptions have also been used for political purposes such as the grave marker installed in January 2008 at Cave Hill Cemetery in Louisville Kentucky by Mathew Prescott an employee of PETA The grave marker is located near the grave of KFC founder Harland Sanders and bears the acrostic message KFC tortures birds 9 The group placed its grave marker to promote its contention that KFC is cruel to chickens Form and decoration editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Typical Death s Head design often used on tombstones in Colonial America Boston MA nbsp An equestrian motif on an 11th century Swedish gravestone nbsp Islamic cemetery in Sarajevo with columnar headstonesGravestones may be simple upright slabs with semi circular rounded gabled pointed arched pedimental square or other shaped tops During the 18th century they were often decorated with memento mori symbolic reminders of death such as skulls or winged skulls winged cherub heads heavenly crowns or the picks and shovels of the gravedigger Somewhat unusual were more elaborate allegorical figures such as Old Father Time or emblems of trade or status or even some event from the life of the deceased particularly how they died Large tomb chests false sarcophagi as the actual remains were in the earth below or smaller coped chests were commonly used by the gentry as a means of commemorating a number of members of the same family In the 19th century headstone styles became very diverse ranging from plain to highly decorated and often using crosses on a base or other shapes differing from the traditional slab By this time popular designs were shifting from symbols of death like Winged heads and Skulls to Urns and Willow trees Marble also became overwhelmingly popular as a grave material during the 1800s in the United States More elaborately carved markers such as crosses or angels also became popular during this time Simple curb surrounds sometimes filled with glass chippings were popular during the mid 20th century Islamic headstones are traditionally more a rectangular upright shaft often topped with a carved topknot symbolic of a turban but in Western countries more local styles are often used Some form of simple decoration may be employed 10 Special emblems on tombstones indicate several familiar themes in many faiths Some examples are Anchor Steadfast hope Angel of grief Sorrow Arch Rejoined with partner in Heaven Birds The soul Book Faith wisdom Cherub Divine wisdom or justice Column Noble life Broken column Early death Conch shell Wisdom Cross anchor and Bible Trials victory and reward Crown Reward and glory Dolphin Salvation bearer of souls to Heaven Dove Purity love and Holy Spirit Evergreen Eternal life Garland Victory over death Gourds Deliverance from grief Hands A relation or partnership see Reference 3 Heart Devotion Horseshoe Protection against evil Hourglass Time and its swift flight IHS Stylized version of iota eta sigma a Greek abbreviation of Iesus Hominum Salvator Jesus savior of mankind alternatively treated as an initialism for in Hoc Signo Vinces In this sign you shall conquer Commonly indicates Roman Catholic faith the latter especially Society of Jesus Ivy Faithfulness memory and undying friendship Lamb Innocence young age Lamp Immortality Laurel Victory fame Lily Purity and resurrection Lion Strength resurrection Mermaid Dualism of Christ fully God fully man Oak Strength Olive branch Forgiveness and peace Palms Martyrdom or victory over death Peacock Eternal life Pillow a deathbed eternal sleep Poppy Eternal sleep Rooster Awakening courage and vigilance Shell Birth and resurrection Skeleton Life s brevity Snake in a circle Everlasting life in Heaven Square and Compasses Freemasonry Star of David Judaism Swallow Motherhood Broken sword Life cut short Crossed swords Life lost in battle Torch Eternal life if upturned death if extinguished Tree trunk The beauty of life Triangle Truth equality and the trinity Tzedakah box pushke Righteousness for it is written to do righteousness and justice Gen 18 19 and the doing of righteousness and justice is preferable to the Lord than sacrificial offering Proverbs 21 3 Shattered urn Old age mourning if draped Weeping willow Mourning grief Greek letters might also be used a w displaystyle alpha omega nbsp alpha and omega The beginning and the end x r displaystyle chi rho nbsp chi rho The first letters spelling the name of ChristSafety editOver time a headstone may settle or its fixings weaken After several instances where unstable stones have fallen in dangerous circumstances some burial authorities topple test headstones by firm pressure to check for stability They may then tape them off or flatten them This procedure has proved controversial in the UK where an authority s duty of care to protect visitors is complicated because it often does not have any ownership rights over the dangerous marker Authorities that have knocked over stones during testing or have unilaterally lifted and laid flat any potentially hazardous stones have been criticised after grieving relatives have discovered that their relative s marker has been moved 11 Since 2007 Consistory Court and local authority guidance now restricts the force used in a topple test and requires an authority to consult relatives before moving a stone In addition before laying a stone flat it must be recorded for posterity 12 13 Image gallery edit nbsp Typical late 20th century headstone Dubuque Iowa nbsp 19th century marble headstone Saints Peter and Paul Catholic Church Sherrill Iowa nbsp Grave marker for Horatio Nelson Ball and father Joseph Ball Jr Grandville Cemetery MI US nbsp Headstone for a dog Tatton Park Cheshire England nbsp Winged skull amp winged soul effigies Morristown NJ nbsp Unconventional tombstone in the Cemetery Park of the Freireligiose Gemeinde in Berlin Prenzlauer Berg Tree stump headstones in U S cemeteries are often associated with fraternal organization Woodmen of the World nbsp Der Schlaf The Sleep 1907 sculpture by Hermann Hosaeus de at the I Stadtischer Friedhof Eisackstrasse de nbsp A late 19th century headstone adorned with the Masonic square and compass nbsp Stecak tombstones in Bosnia burial practice of all religious communities until mid to late 16th century probably spread through Vlach funerary practice nbsp The grave of Uchida Hyakken in Okayama Japan The headstone is columnar which is a particularly common configuration for headstones in Japan nbsp Tombstone topped with orb symbolizing a celestial body and the reward of resurrection churchyard of St Peter s Church in the Great Valley Malvern Chester County Pennsylvania nbsp Personalized gravestone inscription Berwick PASee also editGravestone rubbing Khachkar Mausoleum Megalith Murder stone Sarcophagus Scottish gravestones The Devil s Chair urban legend Tombstone tourist ViewlogyReferences edit Memorial safety Archived from the original on 11 June 2007 Bonello Giovanni 2000 Histories of Malta Volume 1 Fondazzjoni Patrimonju Malti ISBN 978 9993210016 pp 9 11 Jarvis Dale Gilbert Drover Kelly 2018 A Survey of White Bronze Mortuary Monuments in St Johns s The Newfoundland Ancestor 34 1 27 38 Fergus Wessell Headstone Gallery Archived from the original on 7 July 2013 Retrieved 5 September 2013 Robert Fisk An urge to smash history into tiny pieces Archived 15 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Independent 8 September 2007 Lynch Michael W July 1999 Grave Problem Reason Archived from the original on 11 August 2014 Retrieved 7 September 2014 Doris Francis Georgina Neophytu Leonie Kellaher 2005 The Secret Cemetery Oxford Berg p 42 Kara VanDam 2009 Dutch American language shift evidence from the grave LACUS Forum XXXIV 33 42 Bedard Paul 10 January 2008 PETA Takes Fight to Col Sanders s Grave Usnews com Retrieved 19 April 2012 Snider Tui Understanding cemetery symbols a field guide for historic graveyards Castle Azle Press 2017 National Federation of Cemetery Friends Safety in cemeteries guidance Ecclesiastical Case Reports Archived 12 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Re Keynsham Cemetery Gravestones Advice and guidance from The Local Government Ombudsmen PDF Archived from the original PDF on 7 September 2008 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gravestones In Search Of Gravestones Old And Curious by W T Vincent 1896 from Project Gutenberg Azeri org Sofi Hamid Cemetery in Azerbaijani World Burial Index Archived 8 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine Photographs of memorial inscriptions plus free surname search A Very Grave Matter Old New England gravestones Historic Headstones Online Project to transcribe content from historic headstones Pennsylvania German tombstones Archived 11 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine Stockton University includes gravestone imagery in New Jersey How to clean a Grave marker by Ralf Heckenbach Stone Quarries and Beyond Memorializing the Civil War Dead Modernity and Corruption under the Grant Administration by Bruce S Elliott in Markers XXVI Association for Gravestone Studies 2011 pp 15 55 Reprinted with permission of the Association for Gravestone Studies Details the beginning of the mass production of cemetery stones and the increased use of the sand blast process Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Headstone amp oldid 1182860601, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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