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Difference between revisions of "Cemetery/Burying ground/Burial ground"

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==History==
 
==History==
  
In the late eighteenth century, three primary  
+
In the late eighteenth century, three primary types of burial places existed: land adjoining a church (often termed the “churchyard,” but also called a cemetery or burial ground) [Fig. 1], the family plot at one’s home (the burying ground), and public space that was unaffiliated with any specific denomination.1 This latter type was also denoted as a “burying ground” but most commonly was labeled as a cemetery.2 Initially located in central urban areas such as commons, by the nineteenth century public burial grounds were increasingly located in suburban precincts. As late as 1724 (and perhaps long after) New Englanders “valued graveyards more as meadows than as sacred spaces,” and, in the public’s mind, graveyards were regarded as “common, if not hallowed ground,” according to historian David Charles Sloane.3 The word “cemetery,” which “derived from the Greek word for ‘dormitory’ and implied that death was but a tranquil sleep,” reflected the increasing sentimentalization of death and the Protestant theological shift from punitive to redemptive interpretations of death.4 Notably, the terms “burying ground” and “churchyard” were not completely phased out with the introduction of rural cemeteries and continued to be used interchangeably.5 Although the term “cemetery” was often associated with rural park-like spaces, it also referred to enclosed burial grounds, such as the one described in 1796 by Timothy Dwight in New Haven, Conn.  
types of burial places existed: land adjoining  
 
a church (often termed the “churchyard,”  
 
but also called a cemetery or burial  
 
ground) [Fig. 1], the family plot at one’s  
 
home (the burying ground), and public  
 
space that was unaffiliated with any specific  
 
denomination.1 This latter type was also  
 
denoted as a “burying ground” but most  
 
commonly was labeled as a cemetery.2 Initially  
 
located in central urban areas such as  
 
commons, by the nineteenth century public  
 
burial grounds were increasingly located in  
 
suburban precincts. As late as 1724 (and  
 
perhaps long after) New Englanders “valued  
 
graveyards more as meadows than as sacred  
 
spaces,” and, in the public’s mind, graveyards  
 
were regarded as “common, if not hallowed  
 
ground,” according to historian David  
 
Charles Sloane.3 The word “cemetery,” which  
 
“derived from the Greek word for ‘dormitory’  
 
and implied that death was but a tranquil  
 
sleep,” reflected the increasing  
 
sentimentalization of death and the Protestant  
 
theological shift from punitive to  
 
redemptive interpretations of death.4  
 
Notably, the terms “burying ground” and  
 
“churchyard” were not completely phased  
 
out with the introduction of rural cemeteries  
 
and continued to be used interchangeably.5  
 
Although the term “cemetery” was often  
 
associated with rural park-like spaces, it  
 
also referred to enclosed burial grounds,  
 
such as the one described in 1796 by Timothy  
 
Dwight in New Haven, Conn.  
 
  
T he New Haven Burying Ground, as it wa s
+
The New Haven Burying Ground, as it was originally named, was one of the earliest burial places to be located out side the main commercial district of a town [Fi g. 2]. Concerns about public health stemming from overcrowded urban burial places, the development of romantic discourse on the emotional impact of natural scenery, and anxieties about appropriate veneration of the dead resulted in a movement to relocate burial grounds from congested urban sites to more rural settings .6 Observers of the New Haven Burying Ground, including Dwight , praised the proprietors for their orderly and well laid out grounds based upon a geometric plan, with each fenced lot fashioned in the
 
 
o r i g i n ally named, was one of the ea r l i e st bur-
 
i al places to be loc ated out s i de the mai n
 
c o m me r c i al dist r ict of a town [Fi g. 2]. Co ncerns
 
abo ut publ ic health stemming fro m
 
ove r c rowded urban burial places, the de ve lo
 
p me nt of ro m a nt ic discourse on the emot
 
i o n al impact of nat u r al sc e n e r y, and  
 
a n x i eties abo ut ap p ro p r i ate ve n e r ation of the  
 
dead resul ted ina move me nt to reloc ate bur-
 
i al grounds from congested urban sites to  
 
more rural sett i n g s .6 O b s e r vers of the New  
 
H aven Burying Ground, including Dwight ,  
 
p r ai s ed the pro p r i etors for their orderly and  
 
we lllaid out grounds ba s ed upon a geo met r ic
 
plan, with each fe n c ed lot fa s h i o n ed in the
 
  
 
==Texts==
 
==Texts==

Revision as of 15:33, April 18, 2016

History

In the late eighteenth century, three primary types of burial places existed: land adjoining a church (often termed the “churchyard,” but also called a cemetery or burial ground) [Fig. 1], the family plot at one’s home (the burying ground), and public space that was unaffiliated with any specific denomination.1 This latter type was also denoted as a “burying ground” but most commonly was labeled as a cemetery.2 Initially located in central urban areas such as commons, by the nineteenth century public burial grounds were increasingly located in suburban precincts. As late as 1724 (and perhaps long after) New Englanders “valued graveyards more as meadows than as sacred spaces,” and, in the public’s mind, graveyards were regarded as “common, if not hallowed ground,” according to historian David Charles Sloane.3 The word “cemetery,” which “derived from the Greek word for ‘dormitory’ and implied that death was but a tranquil sleep,” reflected the increasing sentimentalization of death and the Protestant theological shift from punitive to redemptive interpretations of death.4 Notably, the terms “burying ground” and “churchyard” were not completely phased out with the introduction of rural cemeteries and continued to be used interchangeably.5 Although the term “cemetery” was often associated with rural park-like spaces, it also referred to enclosed burial grounds, such as the one described in 1796 by Timothy Dwight in New Haven, Conn.

The New Haven Burying Ground, as it was originally named, was one of the earliest burial places to be located out side the main commercial district of a town [Fi g. 2]. Concerns about public health stemming from overcrowded urban burial places, the development of romantic discourse on the emotional impact of natural scenery, and anxieties about appropriate veneration of the dead resulted in a movement to relocate burial grounds from congested urban sites to more rural settings .6 Observers of the New Haven Burying Ground, including Dwight , praised the proprietors for their orderly and well laid out grounds based upon a geometric plan, with each fenced lot fashioned in the

Texts

Usage

Citations

Images

Notes

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History of Early American Landscape Design contributors, "Cemetery/Burying ground/Burial ground," History of Early American Landscape Design, , https://heald.nga.gov/mediawiki/index.php?title=Cemetery/Burying_ground/Burial_ground&oldid=21491 (accessed May 3, 2024).

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