Film Categories
Art Subjects
- 24. Landscape into Art
- 25. The Human Figure in Art
- 26. Animals in Art
- 27. Religious Art
- 28. Drawing and the Graphic Arts
- 29. The Photographic Image
- 30. Art, Architecture and the Environment
- 31. Films for Younger Audiences
- 32. Art and the Subconscious
- 33. Art Appreciation
- 34. Dealers, Exhibitions, Museums and Critics
- 35. Conservation and Preservation
- 36. Techniques of the Artist
- 37. Archaeology
Films to Buy
- Romanesque Architecture of Alsace
- Romanesque Architecture of Burgundy
- Romanesque Architecture of Languedoc
- Romanesque Architecture of Normandy
- Romanesque Architecture of Poitou-Charente
- Romanesque Architecture of Provence
- The Master Builders: The Construction of a Great Church
- Visions of Light
- Beaune: Rogier van der Weyden
- Buildings and Beliefs
- Ecce Homo*
- Fra Angelico
- Jean Fouquet
- Guido Mazzoni
- Rembrandt's Christ
- Via Dolorosa (Stations of the Cross)
- Chapels: The Buildings of Nonconformity
- Star of Bethlehem
- Caspar David Friedrich: Landscape as Language
- Your Church: A Threshold to History
- In Memoriam
- Carved in Ivory*
In Memoriam
The Archaeology of Graveyards
21 minutes, color, age range: 16 - adult, #902
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Graveyards and cemeteries provide an educational source of unparalleled richness: ecology, archaeology, demography, art and social history can all be approached through the evidence they yield. Monuments and burial customs have developed over the last thousand years, and attitudes to death have changed as well. Memorials reflect a community but do so in different ways at different times. In the Middle Ages, overnight vigils with the deceased were common, as were funeral feasts and celebrations. The growth of towns in the eighteenth century led to the establishment of large cemeteries. York public cemetery is divided between Anglican believers, nonconformists and unbelievers. In the nineteenth century death became an industry, with commercially run cemeteries, undertakers and monument makers. There is a wealth of information in graveyards, giving insights into fashions in Christian names, tombstone design, the size of families, child mortality, paupers' graves - all human life, and death, is here. Churchyards are also valuable reserves for wildlife. A carefully managed churchyard can provide habitats for many different insects, butterflies, birds, wild flowers and plants.
This program is particularly suitable for teacher training.
Part of the series Frameworks of Worship
View Free Clip and Download Now US$1.99
Credits
Director: John Murray
Writer: Richard Morris
Presenter: Roberta Gilchrist
English Heritage:
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