Description

Book Synopsis
Reviews the burial history of central North Yorkshire -- .

Trade Review

The book is 'well-conceived, meticulously undertaken, rich and highly nuanced'

'anyone bent on writing seriously about almost any aspect of burial ground provision in England and Wales from the 1850s onwards will ignore this book at their peril.'
Stephen White, Ecclesiastical Law Journal:, 10 February 2015

‘Rugg has an established research reputation in death studies regarding the history of ownership and management of burial space. Cemeteries, it would seem, are her passion. Churchyard and Cemetery: Tradition and Modernity in Rural North Yorkshire reinforces and expands her status as one of the foremost thinkers in this area. Rugg’s clear appetite for examining burial space defines the book. She engages the reader with a topic that might initially appear dry but is actually ripe with ‘the strength of the passions evoked by the issue of burial’ (p. xi) on the local and national stage.’
Ruth Penfold-Mounce, Department of Sociology, University of York, Mortality

-- .

Table of Contents

Introduction
PART ONE
1. Burial in 1850: national and local contexts
2. ‘Dr Hoffman was good enough to consult me’: churchyard closures
3. ‘A very modern act’: the Churchyard Consecration Act and churchyard extension
4. ‘It was entirely a question for the parishioners’: burial board management
5. ‘No differences are so deep as those which arise over the grave’: the religious politics of burial
6. ‘Casting into the great crucible of the present ferment all manner of time-honoured traditions’: new legislative contexts for twentieth-century burial
PART TWO
7. ‘It was a task which he would be greatly pleased to hand over to some other person or persons’: centralisation and cemeteries, 1894–1974
8. ‘Being desirous of avoiding a burial board’: the churchyard as cemetery
9. ‘Unobservable or inconspicuous to the casual visitor’?: the changing churchyard landscape
10. ‘Thoroughly untidy’: changing burial culture, 1850–2007
Appendices
Bibliography
Index

Churchyard and Cemetery

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    £76.50

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    RRP £85.00 – you save £8.50 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Mon 22 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Julie Rugg

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      View other formats and editions of Churchyard and Cemetery by Julie Rugg

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 9/30/2013 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780719089206, 978-0719089206
      ISBN10: 0719089204

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Reviews the burial history of central North Yorkshire -- .

      Trade Review

      The book is 'well-conceived, meticulously undertaken, rich and highly nuanced'

      'anyone bent on writing seriously about almost any aspect of burial ground provision in England and Wales from the 1850s onwards will ignore this book at their peril.'
      Stephen White, Ecclesiastical Law Journal:, 10 February 2015

      ‘Rugg has an established research reputation in death studies regarding the history of ownership and management of burial space. Cemeteries, it would seem, are her passion. Churchyard and Cemetery: Tradition and Modernity in Rural North Yorkshire reinforces and expands her status as one of the foremost thinkers in this area. Rugg’s clear appetite for examining burial space defines the book. She engages the reader with a topic that might initially appear dry but is actually ripe with ‘the strength of the passions evoked by the issue of burial’ (p. xi) on the local and national stage.’
      Ruth Penfold-Mounce, Department of Sociology, University of York, Mortality

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      Introduction
      PART ONE
      1. Burial in 1850: national and local contexts
      2. ‘Dr Hoffman was good enough to consult me’: churchyard closures
      3. ‘A very modern act’: the Churchyard Consecration Act and churchyard extension
      4. ‘It was entirely a question for the parishioners’: burial board management
      5. ‘No differences are so deep as those which arise over the grave’: the religious politics of burial
      6. ‘Casting into the great crucible of the present ferment all manner of time-honoured traditions’: new legislative contexts for twentieth-century burial
      PART TWO
      7. ‘It was a task which he would be greatly pleased to hand over to some other person or persons’: centralisation and cemeteries, 1894–1974
      8. ‘Being desirous of avoiding a burial board’: the churchyard as cemetery
      9. ‘Unobservable or inconspicuous to the casual visitor’?: the changing churchyard landscape
      10. ‘Thoroughly untidy’: changing burial culture, 1850–2007
      Appendices
      Bibliography
      Index

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