Large numbers of purification rites are performed universally on widely varying occasions, both in private life, from conception to death, and in religious ceremonies. Such rites employ materials that include water, dust, or dry sand (in Islam); water and henna, a reddish brown dye (in Islam); oil, incense, balm, and natron, a salt (in ancient Egyptian religion); ale (öl) or wine (in post-15th-century Germanic religion); salt (in Shintō); bread, sugar, spices, and animal blood (in ancient Greek and Scandinavian religions); paper, used in the Shintō gohei, a white paper “whip” that is shaken; ashes, among the Brahmans; and other materials. Water, fire, and light play especially important roles in purification rites. Objects used in such rites include water vessels of various shapes and sizes used for ablutions; jugs and vats containing ale or wine; terra-cotta or glass containers used for balms and perfumes; incense burners, cauldrons, and censers for fumigation; containers used in Confucian rituals, which include a basin (jinlei) for pure water, another small basin (huanbo), and seven goblets (zhi) for the sacrificial wine; and ewers and basins of gold, silver, or copper used in purifying the hands and feet, as in pre-Hellenistic Egypt, or for ritual sprinklings.
The wearing of new clothes that have not yet been washed is also a purification rite, practiced, for example, in the spring of the year (October–November) in Brahmanic India, where it is associated with the festival of lights, Diwali.
Purification may also be attained through mortification and penance, practices that were especially common in medieval Christianity and in Judaism. Methods included the wearing of hair shirts or sackcloth, wearing haircloth undergarments and belts bristling with spikes next to the skin, and flagellating oneself with a scourge made of leather straps or lashing oneself with a whip, such as the sraoshō-karana of Persia.
Objects used in rites of passage
Most of the objects noted above have played or still play a role in rites of passage. Such objects play a secondary role in all such rites, which include rites of initiation, marriage, and death.
Circumcision in pre-Hellenistic Egypt and among the Hebrews, Muslims, Ethiopians, and certain other peoples was and is performed with a flint-blade knife, with some other kind of sharp knife, perhaps of metal, with a razor, or (as in Africa) with a pair of scissors. Among the Zulu and other African tribes, bull-roarers were launched on such an occasion of initiation. In the Brahmanism, Zoroastrianism, and Parsiism of the Indo-Iranian world, a sacred cord (Pahlavi kushti; Sanskrit yajnopavita) is the mark of initiation; in Iran and among the Parsis (Zoroastrians in India), the kushti is wound around the torso, and in India the yajnopavita is passed diagonally from shoulder to waist. Among the Parsis, including the women, the cord is made of strands of lamb’s wool or of goat’s or camel’s hair, and in India the material varies according to caste and may be cotton, hemp, or wool. In addition, the Zoroastrians and Parsis wear a sacred shirt (sudra) made of two pieces of white cambric stitched together. For ordination, a shawl, a cotton veil (padan) to cover the nose and mouth, and a mace are added; the Brahmanic (Vedic) initiate also receives a tall staff and a black antelope skin. In Sikhism (an Indian religion founded by Guru Nanak in the 16th century), initiations of novices formerly included drinking water into which sugar had been mixed with the blade of a dagger (khanda).
In the initiation of Buddhist monks, the tonsure (cutting the hair of the head) is performed with a razor with a handle, and each initiate receives three red or yellow garments, a belt, a bowl for alms (patra), a filter or ewer (kundika), an alms collector’s staff (khakkara), a needle, a toothpick, and a fan. Japanese Shingon Buddhist monks are initiated when they are past 50 years of age, at which time they are baptized (abhisheka) by having water from five kundika poured on their heads and receive, in addition to the objects listed above, a vajra (“thunderbolt”), a wheel (chakra), and a conch (sankha). The principal objects involved in the initiation of Christian priests and monks are the tonsure and sacerdotal vestments. The Buryat shaman receives, in addition to a magical cloak and drum, a four-legged chest (shiré) decorated with lunar and solar symbols.
The religious character of marriage is not universal. Objects involved in the ceremonies of betrothal and marriage include jars (loutrophoroi) for the water of the prenuptial bath of ancient Greece; metal rings placed on the ring finger of the betrothed or married couple among Hebrews, Zoroastrians and Parsis, and persons in classical Rome and in both Eastern and Western Christianity; the bridal veil, orange (flammeum) in Rome and white in the Christian and Slavic worlds; the bride’s crown, made first of marjoram and verbena and later of myrtle and orange blossoms in Rome and of various materials in the Christian and Slavic worlds; and the crown held above the heads of the bridal couple in Eastern Orthodox marriage ceremonies. In Roman and Slavic marriage rites a tunic or shirt was used, and in Hindu rites a yellow wool bracelet (kautukasutra) is tied around the wrist of the betrothed girl by her mother.
The marriage ceremony sometimes takes place under a marriage pavilion or canopy, as among the ancient Etruscans of Italy. The Hebrews first used a closed tent (ḥuppa) and later a silk or tapestry canopy to symbolize the nuptial chamber. Hindus and Parsis use a tent or pavilion (pandal), in which the bridal couple are initially separated by a curtain. Among the Sikhs a paper parasol (agast) is rotated continually over the head of the bridegroom.
In some areas, particularly in contemporary Hindu India, a swing (dola) is set up under the pandal, on which the couple seat themselves after the official ceremony. The seesaw here symbolizes prosperity, love, and the union between earth and sky. The aiōra (“swing”) used in the ancient Athenian Dionysiac festival, the swings of the spring festivals at Puri (Orissa) and in Thailand, also have similar symbolic connotations. During the winter solstice a Vedic sacrifice (hotri) is performed on the swing (prenkha).
Except for Brahmanic and Buddhist ritual suicides by drowning, which require neither ceremony nor funeral apparatus, there are three methods of disposing of dead human bodies: cremation, stripping of the flesh, and inhumation, performed with or without embalming. These methods have coexisted and still coexist throughout the world. The preparation of the corpse often depends on the method adopted, which in turn governs the objects and instruments used. In Japanese sects, particularly in the Shingon and other Buddhist sects, a razor (made of gold in the Jōdo sects) is used for an actual or simulated tonsure of the head of the deceased. A mirror, used in magic to detect evil spirits, figured in the judgment of souls in ancient China. A copper mirror was placed under the head of the dead of pre-Hellenistic Egypt; one of bronze was placed near the head in Buddhist Japan. In Vedic and Brahmanic India, thin pieces of gold were used to close the facial and bodily orifices, and pieces of jade served the same purpose in ancient China. Mortuary masks made of gold, bronze, hard stone, many-coloured terra-cotta, and other materials were used at Mycenae, in pre-Hellenistic and later in Coptic (early Christian) Egypt, in Peru, and in other places to cover the face and sometimes the chest. Elsewhere, a cloth covering the face or a shroud, which often was red, was considered sufficient. Pieces of money to pay for the passage from this world to the next were placed in the mouths of corpses in ancient Mycenae, Greece, and Rome and in a pouch in Japan.
Corpses have been borne to funeral sites by various means. In some regions they are carried on the back or in the arms, and among the Jews, Muslims, Parsis, Slavs, and Hindus they are carried on biers, which are sometimes richly decorated and are either put in a tomb or destroyed. In modern Western countries the funeral chariots of Rome and elsewhere have been transformed into motor hearses, while the contemporary Chinese and Vietnamese use carts that have been specially fitted out. Funeral boats were used in pre-Hellenistic Egypt, in ancient Scandinavia, and in the Pacific islands; Venetians of Italy still use gondolas for funeral rites. The sledge was used in the Kurgan culture of southern Russia.
When cremated, the corpse is often burned with its bier. In the Buddhist world, as, for example, in Cambodia and Thailand, it is burned in a wood and paper coffin made in the form of a sacred animal, with a cloth canopy surmounting the pyre. If the ashes are dispersed after cremation, as in India, they are collected in a cinerary urn. The form and composition of such urns have varied considerably, being made of terra-cotta, stone, porphyry, alabaster, bronze, silver, gold, ceramic ware, and other materials. The urn is placed in the grave, as in ancient Assyria and elsewhere, on a bronze or terra-cotta support (usually an armchair) and lowered into a large jug, as among the Etruscans, or in the niches of the cineraria (places containing ashes of cremated bodies), columbaria (vaults containing urns of cremated bodies), or catacombs, as in Etruria (in Italy), Greece, and Rome. Among the Zapotec of Mexico, the ceramic urn was placed in the niches of cells, the mogotes, made beneath hills set aside for the purpose, a practice also observed by the Miskito people of Nicaragua. In Buddhist countries the urn is often displayed on the domestic altar, and in Tibet the imperfectly calcined bones are ground up and mixed with clay and the mixture is molded into the form of a votive offering (tsha-tsha), which is placed in the niches of the funeral stupa (mchod-rten). In ancient southwestern India the terra-cotta “feminine” urns had a pair of “breasts” formed by two bowls stuck onto the bulge of the urn.
Stripping the flesh of the corpse generally does not require the use of specific objects, since it is the work of vultures or sometimes of pigs, dogs, or other animals. The Parsis, however, build “towers of silence” (dakhma) for the purpose, to which they accompany the deceased with a pot containing fire.
Bodies have been and still are sometimes buried without coffins, as in Rome, where they were put into pit tombs. Among ancient Egyptians, the people of the Harappa civilization (c. 2500–1700 bce) of the Indus valley, and some modern peoples, the corpse is wrapped in a mat made of plant fibres. Coffins are sometimes carved or painted, and some are made from hollowed-out tree trunks. Some coffins are modeled according to the human form, such as the colourful wooden coffins of pre-Hellenistic Egypt or the Chinese coffins covered with jade mosaic of the 2nd-century-bce Han dynasty. The majority, however, are oblong and made of wood; in ancient Greece, coffins were made of cypress. Tibetan coffins (ro-sgam) and Japanese Buddhist and Shintō coffins, however, are cubical, with the corpse placed in a sitting or crouching position. Among certain coastal peoples—e.g., the Vikings—the deceased is either buried in his boat or put out to sea and cremated with it. Sarcophagi—used in many civilizations—were made of various materials: terra-cotta in Etruria, Greece, southern India prior to the 2nd century bce, and Japan; wood and stone in Japan; and marble in late Rome and in the Christian world. They are often richly decorated with symbolic or allegorical carvings and are frequently very colourful. In ancient Egypt the viscera were placed separately in canopic (burial) jars. The Etrurians also used such jars, the covers of which were decorated with the portrait of the deceased.
From prehistoric times, the deceased was accompanied by ordinary objects placed either in the coffin or in the grave itself, the most common of which were drinking cups, pitchers, cups or vessels for solid food, weapons, tools and ornaments, and jewelry. Ancient Chinese collections of funerary objects of high quality have been exhumed, but the most complete outfitting of the dead was that of the Egyptian tombs, which is completed by scenes painted or carved on the interior walls of the rooms of the tomb. Funeral models of houses, wells, farms, herds, and armies were used in the Han (206 bce–220 ce), Tang (618–907), and Ming (1368–1644) periods of China as well as in ancient Egypt. Figurines representing the deceased were included among Egyptian funerary objects, along with figurines representing his retinue; in China the retinue figurines included dancers, musicians, and soldiers (mingqi). The models were probably substitutes for the servants who formerly had been sacrificed in the royal tomb. For a long time the Chinese figurines were made of ceramic decorated in many colours, but in more recent periods (i.e., after the revolution of 1911 and during the 19th century) they were straw effigies.
Some of the individual objects used in funeral rites include situlae, Roman and Egyptian bronze libation jars with a handle on the tops; Indian Brahmanic terra-cotta jars with perforated bases, which are broken after their use in the aqueous purification of the pyre; and cages containing birds (Buddhist Japan), sometimes eagles (ancient Rome), released near the tomb after burial. There are also the objects used in postmortem rites, such as the tablet of the ancestors (Japanese ihai) in China, Japan, and Vietnam and the miniature straw boat, flat-bottomed and with a curved prow, which is set afloat with a bit of candle and food during the Japanese Shintō festival of lights (Bon), returning the spirit of the ancestor to the land of souls after three days’ visit.