Mytum, H. 2007

‘Beyond famous men and women: interpreting historical burial grounds and cemeteries’, in J. Jamerson & S. Baugher (eds) Past Meets Present: Archaeologiests Paternering with Museum Curators, Teachers and Community Groups, Cham: Springer, 411-426.

Keywords

Mytum, H. 1993

‘Death and identity: strategies in body disposal and memorial at North Front Cemetery, Gibraltar’, in M. Carver (ed.) In Search of Cult: Archaeological Investigations in Honour of Phillip Rahtz, Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 189-192.

Mytum, H. 2003

‘Death and remembrance in the Colonial context’, in S. Lawrence (ed.) Archaeology of the British: Explorations of Identity in Great Britain and its Colonies, London: Routledge, 156-73.

Mytum, H. 1994

‘Language as symbol in churchyard monuments: the use of Welsh in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Pembrokeshire’, World Archaeology, 26:2, 252-267.

Mytum, H. 1984

Mortuary Monuments and Burial Grounds of the Historic Period, New York: Kluwer Academic Plenum Publishers.

Mytum, H. 1989

‘Public health and private sentiment: the development of cemetery architecture and funerary monuments from the eighteenth century onwards’, World Archaeology, 21, 2, 283-97.

Mytum, H. 2022

‘Reactions to tragedy: familial and community memorials to sudden occupational deaths in Britain and Ireland’, in T. Kallio-Seppä, S. Lipkin, T. Väre & 2 others (eds) Unusual Death and Memorialization: Burial, Space, and Memory in the Post-Medieval North, Oxford: Berghahn Books, 46-64.

Mytum, H. & Veit, R. (eds) 2023

Innovation and Implementation: Critical Reflections and New Approaches to Historic Mortuary Data Collection, Analysis and Dissemination, New York, NY: Berghahn Books.

Mytum, H., Dunk, J. & Rugg, J. 1994

‘Closed urban churchyards in England and Wales: some survey results’, Post-Medieval Archaeology, 28, 111-14.

Nalle, V. & Moeliono, T. 2023

‘Spatial injustice in the context of cemeteries: the case of Surabaya, Indonesia’, Land Use Policy, 131, 106750.

Nansen, B., Arnold, M., Gibbs, M. & Kohn, T. 2014

‘The restless dead in the digital cemetery’, in C. M. Moreman & A. D. Lewis (eds) Digital Death: Mortality and Beyond in the Online Age, Santa Barbara, CA: Praeger, 111-124.

Naquin, S. 1988

‘Funerals in North China: uniformity and variation’, in J. Watson & E. Rawski (eds) Death Ritual in Late Imperial and Modern China, London: University of California Press, 37-79.

Nash, A. 2018

‘“That this too, too, solid flesh would melt…”. Necrogeography, gravestones, cemeteries and deathscapes’, Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment, 42:5, 548-65.

Nash, D. 2017

‘Negotiating the marketplace of comfort: secularists confront new paradigms of death and dying in twentieth-century Britain’, Revue Belge de Philologie et d’Histoire / Belgisch Tijdschrift voor Filologie en Geschiedenis, 95:4, 963-88.

Nash, G. 2000

‘Pomp and circumstances: archaeology, modernity and the corporatisation of death: early social and political Victorian attitudes towards burial practice’, in P. Graves-Brown (ed.) Matter, Materiality and Culture, London: Routledge, 124-142.

Natali, C. 2008

‘Building cemeteries, constructing identities: funerary practices and nationalistic discourse among the Tamil Tigers of Sri Lanka’, Contemporary South Asia, 16:3, 287-301.

Nations, C., Baker, S. & Krszjzaniek, E. 2017

Trying to keep you: how grief, abjection and ritual transform the social meanings of a human body’, Consumption Markets & Culture, 20:5, 403-422.

Navarette Torres, M. 2022

‘The funeral heritage in Mexico. Cultural tourism with potential for development’, Journal of Tourism and Heritage Research, 5:1, 1-14.

Navarro, S. 1993

‘La construcción de cemeterios en la provincia de Córdoba 1787-1835′ in J. Barberán (ed.) Una Arquitectura para la Muerta: 1 Encuentro Internacional sobre los Cementerios Contemporaneos, Seville: Consejeria de Obras Publicas y Transportes, 399-405.

Nazimi, S. Sediqi, M. & Hatifi, K. 2020

‘A sociolinguistics study of tombstones inscription of Shiite and Sunni of Afghanistan in Bamyan and Badghis provinces’, International Journal of Multidisciplinary Trends, 2:2, 34-42.
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Events

The Cemetery Research Group runs two events a year: in May and in November. Follow the links and send in an abstract