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  2. Poe Toaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poe_Toaster

    Poe Toaster is the media sobriquet used to refer to an unidentified person (or probably more than one person in succession) who, for several decades, paid an annual tribute to the American author Edgar Allan Poe by visiting the cenotaph marking his original grave in Baltimore, Maryland, in the early hours of January 19, Poe's birthday.

  3. Christian burial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_burial

    The tomb or burial plot is then blessed, if it has not been blessed previously. A grave newly dug in an already consecrated cemetery is considered blessed, and requires no further consecration. However, a mausoleum erected above ground or even a brick chamber beneath the surface is regarded as needing blessing when used for the first time. This ...

  4. Burial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burial

    Religious rules may prescribe a specific zone, e.g. some Christian traditions hold that Christians must be buried in consecrated ground, usually a cemetery; [45] an earlier practice, burial in or very near the church (hence the word churchyard), was generally abandoned with individual exceptions as a high posthumous honour; also many existing ...

  5. Consecration in Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consecration_in_Christianity

    Church buildings, chapels, altars, and Communion vessels are consecrated for the purpose of religious worship. A person may be consecrated for a specific role within a religious hierarchy, or a person may consecrate his or her life in an act of devotion. In particular, the ordination of a bishop is often called a consecration.

  6. Richard of Chichester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_of_Chichester

    Richard was militant in protecting the clergy from abuse. When townsmen of Lewes violated the right of sanctuary by seizing a criminal in church and lynching him, Richard made them exhume the body and give it a proper burial in consecrated ground. [11] He also imposed severe penance on knights who attacked priests. [15]

  7. Sheffield General Cemetery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheffield_General_Cemetery

    An Anglican cemetery with a chapel designed by William Flockton and a landscape laid out by Robert Marnock [6] was consecrated alongside the Nonconformist cemetery in 1846—the wall that divided the unconsecrated and consecrated ground can still be seen today. By 1916 the cemetery was rapidly filling up and running out of space, burials in ...

  8. Sacred space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_space

    A sacred space, sacred ground, sacred place, sacred temple, holy ground, holy place or holy site is a location which is deemed to be sacred or hallowed. The sacredness of a natural feature may accrue through tradition or be granted through a blessing. One or more religions may consider sacred locations to be of special significance.

  9. Churchyard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Churchyard

    Lutheran St. Olaf's Church and churchyard in Jomala, Åland Russian Orthodox Church and churchyard in Alaska A Baptist church and churchyard in Ohio. After the establishment of the parish as the centre of the Christian spiritual life, the possession of a cemetery, as well as the baptismal font, was a mark of parochial status.