death rite
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Assorted References
- inheritance customs
- In inheritance: Inheritance and individual ownership of property
…Herero of southwest Africa, the dead man’s goats were slaughtered and eaten; this custom seems to have been connected with the fear that they were affected by his magic and also with the belief that the spirits of the slaughtered goats would follow the dead owner into the realm of…
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- In inheritance: Inheritance and individual ownership of property
- mortuary sacrifice
- In sacrifice: Mortuary sacrifice
…history of man’s religions, the dead have been the recipients of offerings from the living. In ancient Greece an entire group of offerings (enagismata) was consecrated to the dead; these were libations of milk, honey, water, wine, and oil poured onto the grave. In India water and balls of cooked…
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- In sacrifice: Mortuary sacrifice
- pollution and impurity
- In purification rite: Theories of pollution and impurity
The pollution of death, for example, may be confined to those who have actual contact with the corpse, the immediate family of the deceased, certain categories of kinsmen, or all members of the village in which the death has occurred.
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- In purification rite: Theories of pollution and impurity
- quest for salvation
- In salvation: Time
…attest to a preoccupation with death from the very dawn of human culture in the Paleolithic Period (Old Stone Age). Significantly, the burial of the dead is practiced by no other species.
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- In salvation: Time
- ritual cannibalism
- In cannibalism
…cases, the body of a dead person was ritually eaten by his relatives, a form called endocannibalism. Some Aboriginal Australians performed such practices as acts of respect. In other cases, ritual cannibalism occurred as a part of the drama of secret societies.
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- In cannibalism
cultural and regional customs
East Asian
- Chinese Neolithic
- In China: 4th and 3rd millennia bce
Mortuary customs involved ledges for displaying grave goods, coffin chambers, and the burial of animal teeth, pig heads, and pig jawbones.
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- In China: 4th and 3rd millennia bce
- Shintō
- In Shintō: Rites of passage
Shintō funeral ceremonies, however, are not popular. The majority of the Japanese are Buddhist and Shintōist at the same time and have their funerals in Buddhist style. A traditional Japanese house has two family altars: one, Shintō, for their tutelary kami and the goddess Amaterasu Ōmikami,…
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- In Shintō: Rites of passage
Egyptian
- In time: The cyclic view in various cultures
… have taken the offensive against death and decay with the greatest determination: they embalmed corpses; they built colossal tombs; and, in the Book of the Dead, they provided instructions and spells for ensuring for that portion of the soul that did not hover around the sarcophagus an acquittal in the…
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- mortuary temple
- In mortuary temple
…chapel, priests performed the daily funerary rites and presented the offerings to the dead king’s ka (protective spirit). In the New Kingdom (1539–1075 bce) the kings were buried in rock-cut tombs, but separate mortuary temples continued to be built nearby. All were provided with a staff of priests and assured…
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- In mortuary temple
European
- Baltic
- In Baltic religion: Sacred times
…brother Kęstutis could still be buried according to the old traditions in a Christian Europe; dressed in silver and gold, they were burned in funeral pyres together with their best possessions, horses, hunting dogs, birds, and weapons. In spite of a ban by the church and subsequent persecution, this rite…
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- In Baltic religion: Sacred times
- Finno-Ugric
- In Finno-Ugric religion: Sacred ancestors
…the moment of death; (2) funeral preparations (washing the corpse, attiring it, and watching by it; making the coffin); (3) the committal; (4) celebrations in memory of a single dead person; (5) annual memorial ceremonies for the dead; (6) offerings and prayers to the dead in connection with earning the…
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- In Finno-Ugric religion: Sacred ancestors
- Metal Ages
- In history of Europe: The chronology of the Metal Ages
…objects, in styles, and in burial rituals have been used to subdivide the period. The most basic division uses the same criteria as Christian Jürgensen Thomsen’s Three Age system, in which the material used for producing tools and weapons distinguishes an age. This has resulted in a distinction between the…
Read More - In history of Europe: Prestige and status
…is the disappearance of formal burials in this area in the Late Bronze Age; they did not reappear before the last century bce and then only in a few regions, such as Yorkshire. The Late Iron Age inhumation graves in Yorkshire are almost identical to wagon graves in northern France,…
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- In history of Europe: The chronology of the Metal Ages
- Slavic
- In Slavic religion: Communal banquets and related practices
…throughout the Danubian-Balkan region the custom of reopening graves three, five, or seven years after interment, taking out the bones of the corpses, washing them, wrapping them in new linen, and reinterring them. Detailed descriptions of this procedure have come particularly from Macedonia and Slovenia. Among East and West Slavs…
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- In Slavic religion: Communal banquets and related practices
Greco-Roman
- Aegean
- In Aegean civilizations: The Early Bronze Age (c. 3000–2200)
There was evidently much ceremonial in connection with burial, and, apart from objects of personal use such as seals, jewelry, and weapons left with the dead, vases with offerings were regularly placed inside or outside the tombs.
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- In Aegean civilizations: The Early Bronze Age (c. 3000–2200)
- Roman
- In Libitina
…in Roman religion, goddess of funerals. At her sanctuary in a sacred grove (perhaps on the Esquiline Hill), a piece of money was deposited whenever a death occurred. There the undertakers (libitinarii) had their offices, and there all deaths were registered for statistical purposes. The word Libitina thus came to…
Read More - In Roman religion: Sacrifice and burial rites
…comprehensive Etruscan attention to the dead. In spite of elaborate philosophizing by Cicero and Virgil about the possibility of some sort of survival of the soul (especially for the deserving), most Romans’ ideas of the afterlife, unless they believed in the promises of the mystery religions, were vague. Such ideas…
Read More - In ancient Rome: Latinization
…vast majority of them being funerary. The number of inscriptions per year increases slowly during the 1st century and a half ad, thereafter ascending in a steep line to a point in the second decade of the 3rd and then falling off even more steeply. The curve is best explained…
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- In Libitina
Hindu
- In Hinduism: Samskaras: rites of passage
For example, the traditional funeral method is cremation. Burial is reserved for those who have not been sufficiently purified by samskaras (i.e., children) and those who no longer need the ritual fire to be conveyed to the hereafter, such as ascetics who have renounced all earthly concerns. Members of…
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- Ganges River
- In Ganges River: People
…cast the ashes of their dead into the river, believing that this gives the deceased direct passage to heaven, and cremation ghats (temples at the summit of riverside steps) for burning the dead have been built in many places on the banks of the Ganges.
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- In Ganges River: People
- Rigveda
- In Hinduism: The Rigveda
…forms were practiced, the main funeral rite of the rich was cremation. One hymn, describing cremation rites, shows that the wife of the dead man lay down beside him on the funeral pyre but was called upon to return to the land of the living before it was lighted. This…
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- In Hinduism: The Rigveda
Middle Eastern
- Egyptian
- In Middle Eastern religion: The role of magic
…by living persons to the dead in order to achieve practical results, in keeping with the pragmatic, down-to-earth nature of the ancient Egyptians. It was unquestioningly assumed that the dead continued to exert influence on the living. Difficulties experienced by widows, widowers, and other survivors were attributed to the malevolence…
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- In Middle Eastern religion: The role of magic
- Mesopotamian
- In history of Mesopotamia: The emergence of cultures
…known how ancient is the custom of burying the dead in graves nor whether its intention was to maintain communication (by the cult of the dead) or to guard against the demonic power of the unburied dead left free to wander. A cemetery, or collection of burials associated with grave…
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- In history of Mesopotamia: The emergence of cultures
- Ur
- In Ur: Ur in the early dynastic period, 29th–24th century bce
…the custom whereby kings were buried along with a whole retinue of their court officials, servants, and women, privileged to continue their service in the next world. Musical instruments from the royal tombs, golden weapons, engraved shell plaques and mosaic pictures, statuary and carved cylinder seals, all are a collection…
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- In Ur: Ur in the early dynastic period, 29th–24th century bce
- Zoroastrianism and Parsiism
- In Zoroastrianism: Burial rites
The rite is repeated five times a day. After the first one, fire is brought into the room where it is kept burning until three days after the removal of the corpse to the dakhma, or “tower of silence.” The removal must be done during the…
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- In Zoroastrianism: Burial rites
North American Native culture
- Northwest Coast
- In Northwest Coast Indian: Kinship and family life
…very great fear of the dead. A body was usually removed from the house through some makeshift aperture other than the door and disposed of as rapidly as possible. An exception occurred in the northern province, where bodies of chiefs were placed in state for several days while clan dirges…
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- In Northwest Coast Indian: Kinship and family life
- Plateau
- In Plateau Indian: Childhood and socialization
…carried out after an individual’s death. To prevent the dead from lingering among the living, some groups demolished homes where death had occurred. Grave sites were often located at riversides, though the specific form of burial—whether the body was intact or cremated, placed on the surface or in the ground,…
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- In Plateau Indian: Childhood and socialization
South American Native culture
- nomad cultures
- In South American nomad: Rites of passage
Death rites were more complex. Mourners painted their faces black, beat on the outside of the dead person’s hut, fasted, and lamented. They also directed their anger at the supreme deity. In the Chilean archipelago, the dead person and his effects were either buried or…
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- In South American nomad: Rites of passage
- tropical forest cultures
- In South American forest Indian: Belief and aesthetic systems
Urn burial has also been known, especially among Tupí groups; some groups have been known to unearth bones, clean them, and then rebury them. The Tarariu (Tarairiu) of northeastern Brazil and some Pano broiled the flesh of their dead and mixed the pulverized bones and hair…
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- In South American forest Indian: Belief and aesthetic systems
- African dance
- In African dance: The social context
…designed to be performed during funeral rites, after burial ceremonies, and at anniversaries. Dances may be created for a specific purpose, as in the Igogo dance of the Owo-Yoruba, when young men use stamping movements to pack the earth of the grave into place. In Fulani communities in Cameroon, the…
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- In African dance: The social context
- Akan religion
- In Asamando
Akan funeral rites (ayie) are taken quite seriously, because it is the responsibility of the deceased’s family members to perform proper and timely customary rites to ensure that the sunsum can enter Asamando. If the rites are defective, the sunsum might be transformed into an unsettled…
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- In Asamando
- Buddhism
- In Buddhism: Funeral rites
The origin of Buddhist funeral observances can be traced back to Indian customs. The cremation of the body of the Buddha and the subsequent distribution of his ashes are told in the Mahaparinibbana-sutta (“Sutta on the Great Final Deliverance”). Early Chinese travelers such as…
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- In Buddhism: Funeral rites
- Etruscan
- In Roman religion: Importance of ritual
…were perpetually obsessed by their care for the dead, expressed in elaborate, magnificently equipped and decorated tombs and lavish sacrifices. For, in spite of beliefs in an underworld, or Hades, there was also a conviction that the individuality of the dead somehow continued in their mortal remains; and it was…
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- In Roman religion: Importance of ritual
- Hmong
- Mesoamerican
- In Mesoamerican Indian: The life cycle
Death is marked by ritual and burial within 24 hours of death, with repetition of the ritual at periodic intervals after death, sometimes ending on the ninth day, sometimes repeated on the anniversary. An All Saints feast of several days’ duration is prepared annually in…
Read More - In pre-Columbian civilizations: Death
…the Classic Maya buried the dead under the floors of their houses. High priests or powerful lords were laid to rest in elaborate underground vaults. The dead were believed to descend to the nine underworlds, called Mitnal in Yucatán and Xibalba by the K’iche’. There is no evidence of a…
Read More - In pre-Columbian civilizations: Mythology of death and afterlife
…other world and life after death showed the same syncretism. The old paradise of the rain god Tlaloc, depicted in the Teotihuacán frescoes, opened its gardens to those who died by drowning, lightning, or as a result of leprosy, dropsy, gout, or lung diseases. He was supposed to have caused…
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- In Mesoamerican Indian: The life cycle
- military honours
- North Asian
- In shamanism: Basic tasks
…life passages: birth, marriage, and death. If a woman has not borne a child, for instance, then, according to the belief of the Nanai (Golds), in the Amur region of northeastern Asia, the shaman ascends to heaven and sends her an embryo soul (omija) from the tree of embryos (omija…
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- In shamanism: Basic tasks
- Polynesian
- In Polynesian culture: Socialization and education
Death was universally observed through rituals, which increased in extravagance in direct proportion to the status of the deceased. Feasts and elaborate gift exchanges were also common. The extravagance of funeral rites was surpassed, in some societies, by ceremonies to deify a departed chief or…
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- In Polynesian culture: Socialization and education
- Tibet
- In Tibet: Customs
When a death occurs, the family members make charitable contributions in the hope of ensuring a better reincarnation for the deceased. In the case of the death of an important religious figure, his corpse is preserved in a tomb or stupa (Buddhist commemorative monument). Otherwise, tradition calls…
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- In Tibet: Customs
prayers and writings
- Book of the Dead
- In Book of the Dead
…Dead, ancient Egyptian collection of mortuary texts made up of spells or magic formulas, placed in tombs and believed to protect and aid the deceased in the hereafter. Probably compiled and reedited during the 16th century bce, the collection included Coffin Texts dating from c. 2000 bce, Pyramid Texts dating…
Read More - In prayer: Ancient civilizations
…magical prayers that allowed the dead to forestall all the dangers and meet all the eventualities. In particular, they contain negative confessions in which the dead person justifies himself before the court of Osiris (god of the dead). The funeral liturgies of the ancient Egyptians have preserved lamentations that echo…
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- In Book of the Dead
- Pyramid Texts
- In Pyramid Texts
…spells intended to protect a dead king or queen and ensure life and sustenance in the hereafter. The texts, inscribed on the walls of the inner chambers of pyramids, are found at Ṣaqqārah in several 5th- and 6th-dynasty pyramids, of which that of Unas, last king of the 5th dynasty,…
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- In Pyramid Texts
rites of passage
- analysis of ritual
- In ritual: Positive and negative
…king, a marriage, or a death are ritualized both positively and negatively. The ritual of birth or death involves the child or corpse in a ritual that, in turn, places the child or the corpse in a prohibitive status and thus to be avoided by others. The ritual itself, therefore,…
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- In ritual: Positive and negative
- death and renewal
- In creation myth: Creation through emergence
of fertility and death are at once introduced. The seed must die before it can be reborn and actualize its potentiality. This symbolism is dramatically presented in a wide range of funerary rites: one is buried in the earth in hope of a renewal from the earth, or…
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- In creation myth: Creation through emergence
- embalming
- In embalming
…endurance of their heroes in death as in life, expected the bodies of their dead to last without artificial aid during the days of mourning that preceded the final rites. Other societies, less demanding of their greats, developed a wide variety of preservatives and methods to stave off decay or…
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- In embalming
- festival customs
- In feast: Crucial stages of life
…century) to the commercialization of death rites in Western societies. Just as the early Hebrews believed that life passes on to death when the breath (ruaḥ) leaves the body, so also do Eskimos in the 20th century believe that death occurs when breath (soul) leaves the body and that death…
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- In feast: Crucial stages of life
- life-cycle ceremonies
- In rite of passage: Life-cycle ceremonies
Death is given social attention in all societies, and the observances are generally religious in intent and import. In societies that fear dead bodies, the deceased may be abandoned, but they are nevertheless the focus of ritual attention. Most commonly, rites at death are elaborate,…
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- In rite of passage: Life-cycle ceremonies
- prehistoric practices
- In prehistoric religion: Burial customs and cults of the dead
The corpses, accompanied by stone tools and parts of animals, were laid in holes in the ground and sometimes the corpses were especially protected. In some cases, the findings give the impression that the dead were to be “held onto.” Whether or not that meant that…
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- In prehistoric religion: Burial customs and cults of the dead
- sacramental rites
- In sacrament: Sacramental ideas and practices in preliterate societies
…be imbibed in mortuary sacramental rites to obtain the attributes of the deceased or to ensure their reincarnation. To give the dead new life beyond the grave, mourners may allow life-giving blood to fall upon the corpse sacramentally. In this cycle of sacramental ideas and practices, the giving, conservation, and…
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- In sacrament: Sacramental ideas and practices in preliterate societies
- shaman’s role
- In Central Asian arts: Shamanic ritual
…dies a heroic or violent death ascends to the heavens, but that the soul of one who dies from disease, which is caused by an evil spirit, must go to the underworld. The part of a psychopomp, or conductor of souls to the netherworld, was, therefore, another role commonly played…
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- In Central Asian arts: Shamanic ritual
ritualistic objects
- In ceremonial object: Objects used in rites of passage
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…
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- dress
- In religious dress: Later religious dress
To the shroud may be added the ṭallit used by the deceased, but with the fringes removed or cut, because the prescription governing their use applies only to the living. Both liturgical vesture and everyday clothing must conform to the Mosaic requirement that forbids the combination of…
Read More - In religious dress: Islam
…the order to which the deceased belonged and are tinctured in the appropriate colours. Particularly interesting are the ceremonial robes of the Mawlawiyyah order (popularly known in the West as the whirling, or dancing, dervishes), in which the symbolism of the robes is central to the mysteries of the order.…
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- In religious dress: Later religious dress
- masks
- In mask: Funerary and commemorative uses
…in ceremonies associated with the dead and departing spirits. Funerary masks were frequently used to cover the face of the deceased. Generally their purpose was to represent the features of the deceased, both to honour them and to establish a relationship through the mask with the spirit world. Sometimes they…
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- In mask: Funerary and commemorative uses