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The
Evolution of the Modern Cemetery
Up
until the second half of the nineteenth century, most of the population
of Britain, the United States and even the Australian colonies were buried
in churchyards or burial grounds attached to churches.
There
were a number of things that led to the development of the modern landscape
cemetery divorced from the influence of the Church. These factors included:
In
England, increasing dissent towards the established church (the Church
of England) and the rise of other religious denominations.
Those who were not Anglicans resented the requirement to be buried
on Church of England property or church consecrated lands.
Industrialisation
following the industrial revolution and urbanisation and the movement
from the country to the cities. The sudden population
explosions in cities in the late 18th and early 19th
centuries meant that the small parish churchyard could not cope with the
increasing number of burials.
An
increasing concern about the public health implications of burying the
dead in overcrowded conditions in the midst of towns and cities.
It was feared that there were sanitary issues raised by overcrowded
burial grounds that posed a threat to the health of the general population.
Because
of overcrowding in parish church yards, Church authorities began to establish
new burial grounds at a distance from the actual Church building itself.
Thus the direct links between the church and the care of the dead
were being cut in the minds of society.
Society
increasingly formed the view that the dead should be treated with respect,
that one’s resting place should be for perpetuity.
Pere
Lachaise
The
first great landscaped cemetery in modern Europe was the Parisian cemetery
of Pere Lachaise. This cemetery with its serpentine paths was set out
on a hill to the east of the city in 1804. Within its Arcadian landscape,
classical monuments and vaults were erected as memorials to the dead.
By 1820, Pere Lachaise had become the admired model for other European
and American cemeteries.
The
design of Pere Lachaise owes much to the English landscaped garden of
the eighteenth century. The fashion in landscape design
in England in the eighteenth century was to create a ‘natural’ landscape
which was, in fact, highly contrived. Small hills, depressions or
lakes would be constructed; trees and shrubs planted at strategic locations
and small buildings and structures erected to create a landscape which
was pleasing to the eye. In some instances, monuments
and mausolea would even be erected within the landscape as with the mausoleum
at Castle Howard in Yorkshire.
The
cemetery became the final resting spot for many famous 19th
and 20th century figures including Frederic Chopin, Jacques
Louis David, Balzac, Isadora Duncan, Marcel Proust, Sarah Bernhardt, Renae
Lalique, Amadeo Modigliani, Edith Piaf; Oscar Wilde, Gertrude Stein and
Jim Morrison from the 1970s rock group ‘The Doors’.
Pere Lachaise can be easily
visited. It is now a short
distance from central Paris. Take the Metro to either Pere
Lachaise or Gambetta. The main entrance is located
on Boulevard de Ménilmontant. Maps
of the cemetery are available for a fee at the entrance.
The
Glasgow Necropolis
Soon
after, in the 1820s, the people of Glasgow took a hillside, which was
not dissimilar to the hillside at Pere Lachaise, to establish the famous
Glasgow Necropolis. The proposed Glasgow Necropolis
was intended to be non-denominational. In the mid 19th
century the cemetery was regarded as the Westminster Abbey of Glasgow
and nearly every eminent member of Glasgow Society who died between the
1830s and 1870s is buried or memorialised there.
Its
setting and layout have led many commentators to claim that the Glasgow
Necropolis is perhaps the most spectacular cemetery in Britain, certainly
in Scotland.
Kensal
Green Cemetery London
The
General Cemetery Company opened the General Cemetery of All Souls at Kensal
Green in 1833. Again the
model for the cemetery was Pere Lachaise. The cemetery covered some
77 acres.
As
with many 19th century English cemeteries, Kensal Green cemetery
contains two chapels - an Anglican Chapel for the conformists and a second
chapel for the non-conformists. Part of the cemetery grounds
were consecrated for the use of the Anglicans while the remaining unconsecrated
ground was used by the Dissenters. Both
chapels are located atop subterranean catacombs. These large spaces were constructed
of brick. Brick piers supported
the roof.
Within
the space, shelves were constructed for the placement of coffins. Catacombs were a feature of
a number of other English cemeteries of this time and, for the user, were
relatively expensive when compared to the cost of a burial plot.
The
attractive landscaped grounds of Kensal Green soon proved popular.
However, the fashionable status of the cemetery received a major
boost when it was to become the burial place of Princess Sophia and the
Duke of Sussex, two of the children of George III.
No doubt due to their royalty, these two were buried closest to
the Anglican chapel.
The
General Cemetery Company is still in existence, the only one of the nineteenth
century London private cemetery companies to have survived.
The cemetery today is overcrowded with monuments and suffers from
basic neglect. A crematorium
was built within the grounds in 1939.
The
cemetery is well worth a visit.
Take the Underground to Kensal Green,
in West London. Guided tours
are run every Sunday and visit the Catacombs on the first Sunday of the
month (although it would be wise to check for the latest
details).
Norwood
Cemetery London
The
first successor to Kensal Green was the South Metropolitan Cemetery at
Norwood. The cemetery was
built on a hill and consisted of broad sweeping paths winding up to the
two chapels on the hill. The cemetery was opened in
1837 and covers 39 acres.
Unfortunately,
the cemetery has suffered. Bomb
damage in World War II led to the demolition of the two chapels.
In 1966, the local Council, the Borough of Lambeth, took over the
cemetery from the undercapitalised South Metropolitan Cemetery Company. The Council embarked on a
program of removing monuments and tidying the grounds. Unfortunately, this has had
the effect of changing the Victorian character of the cemetery. However, there are still some
monuments and features worth seeing.
Highgate
Cemetery
Highgate
Cemetery covers 37 acres and was established by the London Cemetery Company.
Although not the oldest or biggest cemetery in London, it is probably
the best known and most visited.
The
first burial was in 1839. It
was a relatively exclusive cemetery yet its monuments are perhaps not
as impressive or grand as those to be found in Kensal Green. As with Kensal
Green, two chapels were constructed, one for the use of Anglicans and
one for Dissenters. Similarly, part of the land
was consecrated for the burial of members of the Church of England, while
the remaining unconsecrated land was for the use of others.
An
1865 guidebook to the cemetery stated:
No
cemetery near London can boast so many natural beauties. The irregularity of the ground,
rising in terraces, the winding paths leading through long avenues of
cool shrubbery and marble monuments, and the groups of majestic trees
casting broad shadows below, contribute many natural charms to this solemn
region. In the genial summer
time, when the birds are singing blithely in their leafy recesses, and
the well cared for graves are dazzling with the varied hues of beautiful
flowers, there is a holy loveliness upon this place of death ...
The
one feature that sets Highgate apart form other London cemeteries of the
period is the Egyptian Avenue and Circle of Lebanon. The 1865 Guidebook
said:
As
we enter the massive portals, and hear the echo of our footsteps intruding
on the awful silence of this cold, stony death-palace, we might also fancy
ourselves treading through the mysterious corridors of an Egyptian temple.
The
Egyptian Avenue is flanked by two obelisks. The iron gates give way to
the Avenue which runs below ground level and is flanked on either side
by family vaults. At the
end of the Avenue, is the Circle of Lebanon. This circular subterranean
feature is flanked on either side by a series of family vaults.
A series of steps lead up from this subterranean feature to the
higher ground. In the very
midst of the Circle of Lebanon stands a Cedar of Lebanon that predates
the formation of the cemetery.
Notable
burials include Catherine Dickens (wife of Charles Dickens), George Eliot
(novelist), Michael Faraday (scientist), William Foyle of Foyle’s Bookshop
and the Rosetti family - Gabriele Dante, Christina Rosetti and Elizabeth
Siddal (wife of Dante Gabriel).
The
London Cemetery Company’s finances went into decline after World War II
and eventually the cemetery was taken over by the Friends of Highgate
Cemetery. The Friends of
Highgate Cemetery conduct regular tours of the Cemetery.
Abney
Park Cemetery
This
cemetery was founded by the Abney Park Cemetery Company in 1840 and covers
32 acres. The cemetery was
to be both a burial ground and an arboretum and the Company planted over
2,500 varieties of shrubs and trees and over 1,000
species of rose
bushes, but this was never consecrated and was therefore available
to all denominations. Dissenters from the established Church favoured
the cemetery, but possibly due to their thrifty habits, the cemetery
lacks the grand monuments to be found in Kensal Green or Highgate.By the turn of
the century the cemetery was nearly full. Maintenance of the cemetery
grounds ceased during World War II and shortly thereafter the cemetery
company was declared bankrupt. In the 1970s the cemetery
was taken over by the London Borough of Hackney Council.
By
the turn of the century the cemetery was nearly full. Maintenance of the cemetery
grounds ceased during World War II and shortly thereafter the cemetery
company was declared bankrupt. In the 1970s the cemetery
was taken over by the London Borough of Hackney Council.
Notable
burials include General William Booth, Catherine Booth and Bramwell Booth
leaders of the Salvation Army.
Brompton
Cemetery
This
cemetery was formed by the West of London and Westminster Cemetery Company
in 1840 and covers some 39 acres. The land was flat
and originally a clay pit and brick works.
On this land, a gateway in
the form of a triumphal arch, like Kensal Green, was erected. This gateway led to a long
straight, tree-lined avenue which terminated in a circular colonnade at
the centre of which was a domed Anglican chapel. Beneath the colonnades, catacombs
were constructed guarded by iron doors decorated with various symbols
of death.
The
construction costs were so great that the cemetery company eventually
suffered financial ruin. The
planned Roman Catholic and non-conformist chapels were never built.
Meanwhile, Parliament was debating whether it was fit and proper
for commercial companies to be running cemeteries. Eventually the Government
took over the management of the cemetery from the private company.
From
about this period, private companies were no longer involved in the construction
of cemeteries. It was considered
that the burial of the dead was not an appropriate matter for speculative
companies. Instead, the management of
cemeteries was left to public authorities.
Notable
burials in Brompton include Sir Henry Cole (director of the Victoria and
Albert Museum), Sir Samuel Cunard (ship owner), Emmeline Pankhurst (suffragette)
and John Wisden of Wisden’s Cricket Almanac.
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