enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Corpse road - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corpse_road

    Some country-folk claim that if a dead body is carried across a field it will thereafter fail to produce good crop yields. [3] Throughout the United Kingdom and Europe it is still believed that touching a corpse in the coffin will allow the departed spirit to go in peace to its rest, and bring good luck to the living. [16]

  3. List of mortuary customs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mortuary_customs

    Mortuary house is any purpose-built structure, often resembling a normal dwelling in many ways, in which a dead body is buried. Mummy is a dead human or an animal whose soft tissues and organs have been preserved by either intentional or accidental exposure to chemicals. Mummies of humans and animals have been found on every continent. [16]

  4. Psychomanteum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychomanteum

    The chamber was kept darkened and illuminated only by a candle or a dim light bulb. Subjects gaze into the reflected darkness hoping to see and make contact with spirits of the dead. Moody compared the psychomanteum to the Greek Necromanteion , and said its function was a form of scrying .

  5. With flowers, altars and candles, Mexicans are honoring ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/flowers-altars-candles-mexicans...

    As soon as the sun sets, locals gather at the cemetery to light candles over their family tombs and start a vigil known as “vela." María Martínez, 58, paid a visit to her late husband by noon.

  6. Yahrzeit candle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yahrzeit_candle

    The use of a yahrzeit candle is a widely practiced custom, where mourners light a yahrzeit candle that burns for 24 hours, on the anniversary of the death on the Hebrew calendar. [3] Many Jews who are otherwise unobservant follow this custom. [3] It is customary to light the candle inside one's home, or near the grave of the deceased.

  7. Hand of Glory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hand_of_Glory

    A hand of glory holding a candle, from the 18th century grimoire Petit Albert. According to old European beliefs, a candle made of the fat from a malefactor who died on the gallows, lighted, and placed (as if in a candlestick) in the Hand of Glory, which comes from the same man as the fat in the candle, would render motionless all persons to whom it was presented.

  8. Morgue worker ‘altered’ sex doll as he returned to dead ...

    www.aol.com/morgue-worker-altered-sex-doll...

    The body was collected by two Mid America First Call workers, and authorities left the apartment. But one of those workers, a 41-year-old man, is accused of going back to the apartment.

  9. Symbols of death - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbols_of_death

    Here, again, the ancient Egyptians produced detailed pictorial representations of the life enjoyed by the dead. In Christian folk religion, the spirits of the dead are often depicted as winged angels or angel-like creatures, dwelling among the clouds; this imagery of the afterlife is frequently used in comic depictions of the life after death. [3]