Secondary Burial and the Afterlife in the Middle East, Europe and Anatolia

by Robin Melrose

0 ratings • 0 reviews • 0 shelved
Book cover for Secondary Burial and the Afterlife in the Middle East, Europe and Anatolia

Bookhype may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases. Full disclosure.

Cremation and inhumation are the two most common forms of burial. But in the ancient world there was a another: secondary burial, involving the de-fleshing of the body, followed by another funeral. Common in prehistory from the Middle East and Mycenaean Greece to Britain, the practice ceased between the first and fourth centuries with the advent of Christianity-except in the cases of saints, whose relics were first reburied in the Eastern Roman Empire.

Christianity began in Roman Judea, and the first great Christians were the Desert Fathers of Egypt and the Middle East, who had a unique perspective on the afterlife. Christianity quickly spread to Anatolia (the Byzantine Empire), where different ideas emerged. Heretical sects like the Bogomils of Bulgaria gave rise to vampire myths. In Western Europe, where Christianity was dominated by Rome rather than Constantinople, other visions of the Afterlife developed, such as the Army of the Dead, and the Wild Hunt in France, Germany and England.
  • ISBN13 9781476679921
  • Publish Date 30 September 2020
  • Publish Status Postponed Indefinitely
  • Out of Print 24 April 2021
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint McFarland & Co Inc
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 244
  • Language English