Archive for the 'Modern Mausoleums' Category

May 03 2010

Burials and tombstones in the Land of Living

Published by admin under Middle Ages, Modern Mausoleums

City of the Dead is not just the name of several horror movies, this place actually exists. It is a four miles long area stretching from northern to southern part of Cairo, Egypt. City of the Dead is a weird hybrid of a gigantic cemetery with funeral monuments, tombs and mausoleums, and a home to people who live and work among their dead ancestors.

City of the Dead has old funeral traditions and in some ways it is a unique place of funeral alternatives as well.  This historical necropolis dates back to the 7th century AD.  Many famous Arab emirs and Mamluk rulers are buried here.  In Middle Ages hundreds of custodians who were looking after noble burial monuments and family mausoleums.

Even after the conquest of Egypt by Ottomans City of the Dead still served as a place where the new governors  - pashas  chose to make this place their final resting place.

However, as the years rolled by,  prestige of  City of the Dead declined. Many impoverished Egyptians from overcrowded Cairo, peasants and farmers from nearby villages moved in settled right among the dead.

cityofthedead

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Nov 29 2009

Second Largest Cemetery in Europe - Zentralfriedhof

Published by admin under Modern Mausoleums

If you like history and classical music and accidentally find yourself in Austria, you would, probably, want to visit the burial plots of such famous composers as Beethoven, Brahms, Gluck and Strauss. The good thing is you won’t have to go through various places as their burial plots are located located in one and the same cemetery named Zentralfriedhof.

This largest and most famous Austrian cemetery is situated in Vienna and spans 2.4 square kilometers.  Zentralfriedhof opened in 1874. It is the second largest European cemetery after Hamburg’s Ohlsdorf Cemetery which spans over 4 square kilometers in Germany.  However, as of today Zentralfriedhof has almost 3,5 million  dead people buried there, which makes it the the first one  in Europe because it is largest by number of interred people.

Zentralfriedhof consists of Catholic, Protestant, Russian Orthodox and Jewish cemeteries. It is a part of European cultural heritage. Among upright headstones, mausoleums, big and small memorial monuments, one can find grave markers of famous architects, aviation pioneers, poets and writers, actors and opera singers.  The video  presents the cemetery with the tribute to famous rock singer Falco from the 80s who was also buried here.

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Jun 10 2009

Private Mausoleums of Hollywood Stars

Published by admin under Modern Mausoleums, Uncategorized

They were so different characters… And most defnitely stars of black and white movies. Each of them rose to stardom in Hollywood and all over the world. And all ended their days in the same place: in on the main level of the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Great Mausoleum in Glendale, California. Just steps away from each other entombed in their private mausoleums. So rest in peace Carole Lombard, Clark Gable, Jean Harlow, Irving Thalberg, Norma Shearer and Marie Dressler.

Many interment locations in the Forest Lawn Memorial are kept from any intrusion. Many important people and celebrities found their last haven here. Among them are also  Humphrey Bogart, Lon Chaney and Mary Pickford.   Their burial places are secluded in private gated gardens with no public access.

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Mar 19 2009

Modern Mausoleum Complex in the Center of Karachi

Published by admin under Modern Mausoleums

Among the prominent modern mausoleums around the world, there is a famous one in the city of Karachi, Pakistan.  It is a usual place of visit of the dignitaries and officials from foreign countries.  This Pakistani national masoleum complex is called in Urdu language Mazar-e-Quaid. Inside it, there is a tomb of the founder of Pakistan -  Muhammad Ali Jinnah. 

The mausoleum complex including the monuments was completed in the 1960s. However, its arcitechtual design has an interesting history. It was borrowed from the past. In fact, tthis white marble mausoleum construction is the replica of the funeral complex built in Central Asia between 892 and 943.  This famous original is called Samanid mausoleum. It is located in modern city of Bukhara, Uzbekistan on the burial site of even more ancient cemetery.

Mazar-e-Quaid is elevated on 54 metres platform and has an inner cool sanctum. The burial chamber contains an impressive four-tiered crystal chandelier presented to Pakistan from the Republic of China.  The memorial park that surrounds it can also be considered a cemetery complex as it serves as the place of entombment for most prominent people of Pakistan, including the first prime minister of this country. 

At nights, the mausoleum is glowing and can be seen for miles, as strong-beamed lights in the memorial park are reflected from its white surface.  On special occasions, grand military and official Pakistani ceremonies are taking place here as well.

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Mar 01 2009

Grand Mausoleum at the Palace of Arisen Mountain

Published by admin under Modern Mausoleums

One of the most interesting modern mausoleums has been located in Central Java province which is a part of the Republic of Indonesia.  It is a grand   mausoleum complex for the Suharto family named Astana Giribangun which is translated from Javanese into English as a “Palace of Arisen Mountain”. 

Suharto was a second president of Indonesia who ruled his country with an iron hand from 1967 to 1998 and passed away in January 2008. His mausoleum construction and subsequent entombment partially occupies a huge cemetery and memorial park famous for  the burial sites of the royal Java kings and their families. 

The history of the mausoleum is the following. President Suharto chose this place for construction before his death because this exact  location is considered a powerful magical place by many Indonesian   spiritualists and soothsayers.  The granite mausoleum building was created in traditional Javanese architectural style to serve as last place for the remains of Suharto’s late wife and her mother in 1996.

Moving the crypts of his relatives to the the mosoleum instead of the regular cemetery lots led to the huge controversy in the Indonesian and, especially, Javanese society.  Some thought that Suharto’s wife should not have been buried at this sacred place as she was not of true royal blood but a simple commoner.

Eventually, this incident grew as a snowball and ended in court. The decision of the court was even more astounding.  It allowed president Suharto to have the mosoleum complex and family monuments at the cemetery but they should not be higher than existing royal tombs.  

This the incident was resolved and in January 2008 president died and joined his relatives in the mausoleum, where he was buried with full state military honors.

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Oct 12 2008

Two Family Mausoleums in Arlington National Cemetery

Published by admin under Modern Mausoleums

Everybody in the world heard about Arlington National Cemetery - the largest military cemetery in the United States.  It was established during the Civil War and since that time over 290,000 people were buried there.  It may come as news, but there are also two family mausoleums in Arlington National Cemetery.

These are the only two mausoleums located in the borders of the cemetery. The first family mausoleum is the final burial place for many descendants and members of the Miles Family. And the second one belongs to the Sullivan Family.

Lieutenant General Nelson Appleton Miles served for 42 years in the United States Army.  He fought in the Civil War, Indian Wars and Spanish-American war.  He was already old when the World War 1 began but he still volunteered to serve in the army. President Wilson turned Miles down due to his age.  General Miles died in 1925 and was buried  in Arlington National Cemetery at the first mausoleum confined within this area.

Brigadier General Thomas Crook Sullivan whose final resting place is in the second mausoleum in the confines of Arlington National Cemetery land a long lasting military career too.  He was a guard for president Abraham Lincoln during his inauguration.  Then Sullivan served during the Civil War participating in many decisive battles. General Sullivan died in 1908 and after the cremation his remains were buried in the mausoleum of the Arlington National Cemetery.

It seems that both personal mausoleums are destined to be the only ones on this famous cemetery.  Since 1925,  none of other deceased American war heroes and veterans ever received such a prestigious burial place.

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Sep 15 2008

Whispering Walls of the Scottish Family Mausoleum

Published by admin under Modern Mausoleums

Only for several days every year public can visit one the most remarkable places in Great Britain - Hamilton Palace Mausoleum. It is the family mausoleum that is a part of the Hamilton Palace complex which is the largest non-royal residence in the western world. Mausoleum design was developed in the middle of 19th century by David Hamilton and the whole structure was completed in 1858 by architects David Bryce and Alexander Richie. Originally, the 10th Duke Hamilton planned this Roman-style burial place to be a private mausoleum for his family members on his land in Hamilton, South Lanarkshire, Scotland.

Inside the mausoleum, the 10th Duke Hamilton was buried in a sarcophagus, built in the ancient Egyptian style.  The remains of almost two dozen of his ancestors were buried in the crypt below. Later, during the big flooding from river Clyde, the human remains of this grand and unique mausoleum were moved out of this entombment and re-buried in the local cemetery.

The grand marble and granite mausoleum is not only famous of its size, although the latter is remarkable too as it occupies a site of 650 feet and reaches the height of 123 feet. Mausoleum builders “equipped” it with the longest-lasting echo of any building in the world. The visitors of the impressive mausoleum can also witness the acoustic effect that is nicknamed “whispering walls”.  If two people would stand on the opposite sides at both ends of the interior walls facing each other, they  can easily conduct a whispered conversation. Another interesting detail of the family mausoleum was a giant glass oculus on the dome. In 1970 it was emoved and replaced by a perspex version with the help of a helicopter.


hamilton

Hamilton Palace Mausoleum


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Sep 06 2008

Family Mausoleum in Manhattan

Published by admin under Modern Mausoleums

You won’t find a new yorker who does not know Grant’s Tomb. It is a family mausoleum that contains the remains of President Grant and his wife Julia. The mausoleum complex is located in Manhattan overlooking Hudson River.

As of today, Grant’s tomb is the largest mausoleum in North America.  The whole complex was completed 12 years after Ulysses S. Grant’s death in the end of 19th century by the architect John Duncan.  Not only the size of the tomb makes it special - this unique mausoleum was paid by huge public subscription.

The mausoleum builder John Duncan was inspired by the tomb of Mausolos at Halicarnassus and he tried to reflect the modern concept of it by building this beautiful granite and marble mausoleum. He also surrounded the structure by memorial statues of Civil War generals.  Some say, that there are similarities between this resting place and Napoleon tomb in Paris.

Some hundred years passed by and Grant’s tomb became totally neglected and somewhat forgotten. In the end of the 20th century mausoleum was not only in a state of complete disrepair, it was also vandalized by spray-painted graffiti. It was not even considered important enough by city authorities in order to go through emergency repairs.  The descendants of general Grant were even going to move his and his wife remains to a private mausoleum in Illinois.

Renewed public interest to the events of the Civil War changed this nasty situation. Restoration works were completed in 1997 and they cost almost two million dollars.  The area around the tomb is monitored and the security increased.  Military ceremonies are conducted in the  mausoleum complex. Currently there are plans to create a visitor center and to expand the restoration works.

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