In many cultures the dead are seen as not permanently severed from the living. Some groups venerate their ancestors, some groups venerate heroic mortals as having god-like qualities, and some groups offer gifts to placate angry ghosts -- the approaches differ. This article will examine similarities and differences in the relationships between the living and the dead.
The minimum requirement for veneration offered to the dead is probably some kind of belief in an afterlife, a survival at least for a time of personal identity beyond death. These beliefs are far from uniform.
- Celtic attitudes toward, practices in connection with, and festivals of the dead
- see Samhain
- Greek attitudes toward, practices in connection with, and festivals of the dead
- Hebrew attitudes toward, practices in connection with, and festivals of the dead
- Rabbinical Judaism's attitudes toward, practices in connection with, and festivals of the dead
Many early Christians were
persecuted for their faith, leading many Christians in Rome to hide in the
catacombs. As a result, they found themselves praying and worshipping God surrounded by the tombs and bodies of the dead. When possible, they sought to pray among the bodies of dead Christians, sometimes using a coffin or tomb for an altar on which to celebrate the
Eucharist. Sometimes they witnessed
miracles in connection with the bodies of dead Christians, such as healing, or observing sweet-smelling myrrh exuding from their bones. This, combined with their belief in the
Resurrection of Jesus Christ and future resurrection of all Christians, eventually led to the veneration of
saints and of their relics. Early accounts of martyrs include Christian witnesses making great efforts to obtain the remains of the martyrs, and of the Romans sometimes trying to prevent this. Also, it became common to continue to ask Christian leaders to pray for them, even after the leaders had died, as they believed that these Christians were still able to pray and that their prayers would still be effective.
Catholicism's attitudes toward, practices in connection with, and festivals of the dead
See
All Saints Day,
Saint,
Day of the dead
See "Hsiao" in Confucianism
The ancient Egyptian pyramids are the most famous historical monuments devoted to the dead (see
Great pyramid of Giza[?]). Egyptian religion posited the survival of the soul in connection with the survival of a physical receptacle for the soul - hence mummification and portraiture flourished.
see also History of Egypt
The ancient Romans, like many Mediterranean societies, had strong prohibitions against dead bodies. Bodies of the dead were often displayed for a time, but were then taken outside the
pomerium or sacred boundary of the City - in effect, the City walls - for cremation. Ashes and bone fragments were then interred outside the walls. Aristocratic Romans had from their remote past observed the custom of keeping portraits of their male ancestors - they had probably borrowed this custom from the
Etruscans. These portraits were originally in the form of masks - probably even death-masks moulded on the dead ancestor's face. On significant family holidays the living members of the family might wear the masks in procession. In the 2nd century A.D. practices shifted from cremation to burial. The reasons for this change are not at all clear. Scholars have posited influences from groups who practiced burial - for instance, the increasing numbers of Germanic
foederatii (troops settled inside the borders of the empire) - and from the increasing numbers of practitioners of religions that practiced burial for doctrinal reasons, like
Judaism,
Christianity, and the Egyptian syncretistic
Mystery religions[?].
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