This mortal month: April 2016
5 things that we learned about death and dying this month on social media
Taking a look at changing attitudes to death and funeral traditions
The female form was the focus of 16th-19th century mourning jewellery
Writer, jewellery historian and founder of Art of Mourning, Hayden Peters gives an excellent exploration of the trends in mourning jewellery during the 16th to 19th centuries, including memento mori and hair jewellery.
Macy’s has a memorial to its former owner who died on the Titanic
Isidor and Ida Straus, died on the Titanic’s maiden voyage on April 15, 1912. The former owner of Macy’s in New York, and his wife, were much loved by employees who raised money for a bronze plaque memorial which can still be viewed today at the 34th Street entrance to the store.
A ‘house for the dead’ dating back 7,500 years has been found on Marawah Island in the UAE
Archaeological digs on Marawah Island, off the coast of Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates, have unearthed a Stone Age village containing skeletal remains in what is believed to be a ‘house for the dead’. The findings will help archaeologists learn more about ancient Arab life in the region.
‘Blooms and tombs’ tours are held every Spring in Sacramento’s Old Cemetery
Sacramento’s Old City Cemetery holds tours of the ‘blooms and tombs’ in the historic graveyard every Spring. The cemetery is famed for its roses, many of which are now under threat from the City Council’s new guidelines which state that markers and monuments must be fully visible from all directions now that the graveyard has designated a historial cemetery.
Death masks and other anatomical waxworks are on display in a Brooklyn exhibition
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