The fascinating history of cemeteries - Keith Eggener

6,188,638 views ・ 2018-10-30

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Spindly trees,
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rusted gates,
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crumbling stone,
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a solitary mourner—
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these things come to mind when we think of cemeteries.
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But not so long ago,
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many burial grounds were lively places,
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with blooming gardens and crowds of people
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strolling among the headstones.
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How did our cemeteries become what they are today?
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Some have been around for centuries,
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like the world’s largest, Wadi al-Salaam,
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where more than five million people are buried.
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But most of the places we’d recognize as cemeteries are much younger.
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In fact, for much of human history,
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we didn’t bury our dead at all.
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Our ancient ancestors had many other ways of parting with the dead loved ones.
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Some were left in caves,
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others in trees
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or on mountaintops.
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Still others were sunk in lakes,
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put out to sea,
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ritually cannibalized,
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or cremated.
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All of these practices,
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though some may seem strange today,
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were ways of venerating the dead.
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By contrast, the first known burials
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about 120,000 years ago
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were likely reserved for transgressors,
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excluding them from the usual rites
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intended to honor the dead.
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But the first burials revealed some advantages over other practices:
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they protected bodies from scavengers and the elements,
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while shielding loved ones from the sight of decay.
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These benefits may have shifted ancient people’s thinking
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toward graves designed to honor the dead,
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and burial became more common.
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Sometimes, these graves contained practical or ritual objects,
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suggesting belief in an afterlife
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Communal burials first appeared in North Africa and West Asia
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around 10 to 15,000 years ago,
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around the same time as the first permanent settlements in these areas.
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These burial grounds created permanent places to commemorate the dead.
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The nomadic Scythians littered the steppes
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with grave mounds known as kurgans.
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The Etruscans built expansive necropoles,
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their grid-patterned streets lined with tombs.
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In Rome, subterranean catacombs housed
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both cremation urns and intact remains.
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The word cemetery, or “sleeping chamber,”
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was first used by ancient Greeks,
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who built tombs in graveyards
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at the edges of their cities.
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In medieval European cities,
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Christian churchyards provided rare, open spaces
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that accommodated the dead,
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but also hosted markets, fairs, and other events.
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Farmers even grazed cattle in them,
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believing graveyard grass made for sweeter milk.
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As cities grew during the industrial revolution,
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large suburban cemeteries replaced smaller urban churchyards.
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Cemeteries like the 110-acre Père-Lachaise in Paris
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or the 72-acre Mt. Auburn in Cambridge, Massachusetts
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were lushly landscaped gardens
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filled with sculpted stones
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and ornate tombs.
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Once a luxury reserved for the rich and powerful,
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individually marked graves
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became available to the middle and working classes.
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People visited cemeteries for funerals,
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but also for anniversaries, holidays,
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or simply an afternoon outdoors.
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By the late 19th century, as more public parks and botanical gardens appeared,
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cemeteries began to lose visitors.
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Today, many old cemeteries are lonely places.
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Some are luring visitors back with tours,
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concerts, and other attractions.
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But even as we revive old cemeteries,
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we’re rethinking the future of burial.
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Cities like London, New York, and Hong Kong
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are running out of burial space.
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Even in places where space isn’t so tight,
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cemeteries permanently occupy land
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that can’t be otherwise cultivated or developed.
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Traditional burial consumes materials
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like metal, stone, and concrete,
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and can pollute soil and groundwater
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with toxic chemicals.
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With increasing awareness of the environmental costs,
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people are seeking alternatives.
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Many are turning to cremation and related practices.
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Along with these more conventional practices,
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people can now have their remains shot into space,
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used to fertilize a tree,
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or made into jewelry,
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fireworks,
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and even tattoo ink.
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In the future, options like these may replace burial completely.
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Cemeteries may be our most familiar monuments to the departed,
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but they’re just one step
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in our ever-evolving process
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of remembering and honoring the dead.
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