Fact Sheets - Memorials
Transcription
Fact Sheets - Memorials
Fact sheets Taking a closer look at…. Memorials It is suggested that one or two the following fact sheets are printed out and used as wall or poster displays or laminate and make available for students The Fact sheets in this set include 1. What to look for on a headstone: A stele is…. 2. Headstone design: Stele come in many shapes and sizes. 3. Headstone design: Crosses come in many forms. 4. Headstone design: Pedestals. 5. Why headstones are so different! Introducing the cemetery: What to look for on a headstone A Stele is… 1 a one-sided, upright, headstone 1 Most headstones have a decoration or ornament that has meaning for the living and the deceased. This stele has a wreath. The circle shape of the wreath represents eternity and memory. 2 This stone inserted into the headstone is the ledger and contains the inscription or epitaph. 3 The inscription or epitaph usually begins with the words “Sacred to the memory of” or “In loving Memory of”. 2 3 Inscriptions will usually include date of death and age at death. Sometimes inscriptions will include other information such as an accidental death, personʼs occupation, affiliations or war involvement. Not all the names listed on an inscription will be buried here. Samuel Gourley was killed in the South African War in 1900. Many family members are frequently shown on the inscription. 4 4 The base stone is called the plinth and protects the more expensive headstone material from ground moisture. Some headstones have several plinths. Introducing the cemetery: Headstone design 1 2 3 Stelae come in many shapes and sizes Stelae are a traditional form of memorial and were popular in parish churchyards in Great Britain and Ireland. They can be found in many shapes and sizes from rectangular with domed, arched, pointed or curved tops and are of an even thickness. They were generally erected upright. Most stelae are made of granite, marble or Oamaru stone and inscriptions are completed with incised lettering or lead lettering in marble stones. Some granite stones have incised lettering accented with gold or silver leaf. 5 4 1 6 Gabled stele 2 Rectangular stele 3 Gothic shaped stele with side pillars 4 Gothic shaped stele with niche 5 Stylised domed stele 6 Arched stele (Chinese) Ancient Egyptian funerary stele, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford Introducing the cemetery: Headstone design 1 Crosses 3 come in many forms 2 Crosses can be found in many varieties. The most common designs found in our cemeteries are the Latin Cross which is a plain form representing the Cross on which Christ died, and the Celtic cross which has a circular shape at the intersection of the bars. Other forms of the cross are also represented. Crosses can be erected as statues or they can be incised or carved into the memorial design. 1 6 Latin cross 2 Celtic Cross 3 Gabled stele with stylised cross pattee (Templar Cross) surmount. 4 4 Gabled stele with stylised cross 5 Glory cross (with sunʼs rays) 6 Stylised trinity cross 7 Orthodox or Russian Cross 5 7 Introducing the cemetery: What to look for on a headstone. Pedestals 2 The advantage of a pedestal monument was that it offered a number of sides on which inscriptions could be made. 3 Pedestal styles were adapted from ancient Roman monuments similar to those found at Pompeii. Pedestals generally had flat sides, and could be topped by a column, obelisk, urn or statuary such as an angel. 1 Obelisk 2 Broken Column 3 Pedestal topped by an Urn 4 Pedestal topped by statuary When reading inscriptions on pedestal monuments be careful you check all four sides for information. Often loved family members who died overseas were commemorated on the sides of these pedestals. 1 4 Introducing the cemetery: What to look for on a headstone. Slabs and Tablets Stone and cement slabs set directly into the ground or sometimes into a base course could not exceed 6 inches above the ground. Kerbing was permitted, as was the inscription of the family name into the foot or headstone. Many slabs were embellished with corner stones or pebbles, others were turfed within the curbing and planted. A variety of slabs and tablets from the Northern and Southern cemeteries Introducing the cemetery: Why headstones are so different? In Victorian and Edwardian times, a familyʼs financial status and standing in the community dictated the extent of grave ornamentation. In death, the lasting memorial to a person could convey his or her aspirations, even if they were not fully realised in life. Many early memorials in the Northern Cemetery are grand statements but as time moved on a more egalitarian approach to life, the high ideals of 19th century cemetery philosophy faded and simplicity pervaded the economy and scale of the monuments. (Betteridge 2005) 2 1 1 The cemetery regulations specified that only purchasers of Class I plots could exercise the privilege of “erecting headstones or other monuments.” The tall obelisk pictured is an example of a Class 1 plot. 3a While those with class II plots were permitted to have a flat stone laid horizontally with an inscription or marked out by corner stones with initials and figures. The surname plaque pictured is an example of a Class II plot. Many Class II plots never had memorials, of any kind, erected. Class III plots were often in inaccessible parts of the cemetery. The cost of the plots were, 2 Child Adult 1st Class £3.0.0 £3.0.0 2nd Class £2.17.6 £2. 7. 6 3rd class 12.6 £1.2.6 3b 3 Later headstones became much more simple in design as the two examples numbered 3a and 3b show. In Area 5 students will come across all types of headstones. There is usually much less information on later headstones, which requires investigation of online cemetery records to find out more.