An Indian authority cited four and a half quintal of wood for an open-air cremation. |
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Indeed, in both places, an increasing number of young families are choosing cremation and burial, followed by a worship service. |
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The Thai commander then disinterred the body of King Ekkathat and accorded it full cremation honours. |
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The crematorium owner claimed that they will do 3 cremation per day, 3 embalmments per month. |
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So it was nice to be invited to the jollity and gaiety of a wedding for once instead of being summonsed to a cremation. |
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The mourners returned to the funeral home to wait for Francisco's cremation. |
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According to the report, the cremation time at the funeral parlor fluctuated between 42 and 90 minutes. |
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After the cremation, the funeral parlor would be disinfected, the bureau said. |
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The funeral service and cremation will be held at Scholemoor Cemetery tomorrow at 1pm. |
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Friends and family later attended the funeral service at The Knowle, followed by cremation at Oakworth. |
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All we knew, though, was that she wanted a small private cremation with only immediate family present. |
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These coffins are covered with a wood veneer which is removed before cremation or burial. |
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The cremation of the royal remains was therefore a catastrophe that shook Malagasy society to the core. |
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The mortuary program incorporated a variety of burial modes, including extended and flexed primary, bundle, and cremation. |
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In recent years, cremation with inurnment of the cremains, rather than burial, has become more common. |
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Cremated remains can be buried at one of our cemetery ground sites, scattered in a cremation garden, or inurned and placed in a columbarium. |
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The trend from cremation to inhumation in burial practice may also be consciously copying the changing Roman fashion. |
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In late Roman times there was an increased diversity in burial practice and examples of both cremation and inhumation are found. |
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Forgive me for the indelicate question, whose decision was it to go with cremation? |
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The cremation graves at Vronda all have multiple burials within the same cist grave. |
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Excavations revealed a sarsen stone cist containing a cremation burial accompanied by a bronze awl and a jet pendant. |
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During this testimony, we see scenes of a Hindu funeral procession in India, which ends at a cremation ghat. |
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He will be brought to Trinity University Chapel on Thursday for necrological services before the cremation of his remains on Friday. |
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A number of Bronze Age cremation pits were discovered along the route and pieces of ancient pottery were unearthed. |
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At first cremation was the rule, as were flat or low graves, though later the tumulus or raised barrow became standard. |
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I did suggest cremation and then the scattering of his ashes by means of a rocket firework. |
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In the case of cremation, this may follow quite soon, with the ritual interring or scattering of the products of cremation. |
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The hotly contested question about cremation rites is not surprising, given their crucial status in the local religion. |
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A new group set up to review burial and cremation legislation has held its first meeting. |
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Many parents choose cremation because they can take their baby's ashes home or distribute them at a location that has some meaning to them. |
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They wear ornaments of human bone, which remind us of death, impermanence and renunciation, and as adornment, they wear ashes from cremation grounds. |
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Cammue, whose agency has now performed a thorough assessment of the current cremation process at Boystown, is extremely concerned. |
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Last November, for example, I managed to track down a celebrated tantric at a cremation ground near Birbhum in West Bengal. |
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Heather described how the cremation took place nine days after his death earlier this year in Reddish and said the undertakers were instructed to collect the urn and store it. |
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Richly glazed and often spectacularly potted, the sources for these works include Anglo-Saxon cremation urns, Peruvian vases and, on at least one occasion, a Fijian carving. |
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Believing that associated cremation burials might be lost, archaeologists cleared the barrow to the top of the original earth mound, which was only 50 cm high. |
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For that reason, cremation is very popular in markets across Arizona and Florida, home to many snowbirds and transplanted retirees, as shown in the above map. |
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These are characterized by small villages of rectangular pit-houses, cremation of the dead, and plain grey or brown pottery, sometimes painted red on buff. |
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After death, the corpse is washed and prepared for cremation. |
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The product of cremation is not ashes in the sense of a powder, but fragments of bone, whose size is determined by the temperature of the cremator or pyre. |
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Another Danelaw site is the cremation site at Heath Wood, Ingleby, Derbyshire. |
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It is not uncommon for the circle to contain a ring cairn and cremation remains. |
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The prime burial tradition was cremation, but the third century and thereafter saw an increase in inhumation. |
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In the east there was a gradual transition among the pagan Saxons from cremation to inhumation. |
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His cremation was held three days later, and a funeral was held in Poets' Corner of Westminster Abbey in October that year. |
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The vase tradition has a general distribution and feature almost exclusively cremation. |
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After cremation the Khasi take the ashes of their dead to the clan cinerarium. |
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This is the earliest find of cremation in Scandinavia and it shows close contacts with Central Europe. |
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In his graphic account of the cremation, he writes of Byron being unable to face the scene, and withdrawing to the beach. |
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Then Heal STL was burned down Monday like a moribund body for cremation. |
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Called alkaline hydrolysis, this chemical body processing uses one-tenth the natural gas of fire-based cremation and one-third the electricity. |
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In general, if a body was to be buried without cremation, it was placed into a kistvaen in a contracted position. |
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It was sent away for analysis and when he results came back from the police lab it emerged that the powder was ashes from a cremation. |
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The funerals involved either burial or cremation, depending on local customs. |
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When cremation did take place, the ashes were usually placed within an urn and then buried, sometimes along with grave goods. |
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A richly furnished cremation grave excavated in 1972 contained an oak coffin, in which an Etruscan stamnos had been placed. |
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The 65-acre first phase project will contain approximately 15,900 casket gravesites and 3,000 columbaria and cremation gravesites. |
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Funeral service and cremation will take place at Fixby Crematorium Huddersfield on Tuesday January 6th 2015 at 2pm. |
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A memorial service will be held in Virginia Beach, Virginia on Monday, September 7, 2009 followed by cremation. |
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The king's death and cremation was to inspire the creation of an order of nuns. |
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In Neolithic times, the dead would have been deposited within the chamber as a cremation or, in later years, as disarticulated remains. |
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He laid a wreath at the cremation site of Mahatma Gandhi and signed the guest book. |
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His cremation was part of a days-long funeral, which started with a lavish procession through the streets of Phnom Penh on Friday. |
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Following cremation at Woking Crematorium, his ashes were scattered off Beachy Head, near Eastbourne as he had requested. |
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The Jurchens and their Manchu descendants originally practiced cremation as part of their culture. |
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Burial was mostly by inhumation, but the presence of cremation remains cannot be ruled out. |
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Various forms of burial were conducted, including both inhumation and cremation, typically accompanied by a variety of grave goods. |
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They had cremation burials and possessed advanced metallurgical techniques. |
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It was characterized by its use of cremation burials in extensive urnfields and links with the practices of the Northern Bronze Age. |
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The bearers of the Przeworsk culture mainly practiced cremation, with occasional inhumation. |
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Enter resomation, an alternative to cremation for the eco-conscious cadaver. Resomation is a process that liquefies rather than burns body tissues. |
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Stonehenge is therefore interpreted as functioning as an enclosed cremation cemetery at this time, the earliest known cremation cemetery in the British Isles. |
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The square contains a statue of Dr William Price a pioneer of cremation. |
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Although the typical Bell Beaker practice of crouched burial has been observed, cremation was readily adopted in accordance with the previous tradition of the autochthons. |
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His promotion of cremation and open practice of it led to his arrest and trial, but he was acquitted, achieving a level of fame throughout Britain. |
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It is testament to the high regard that many walkers have for Great Gable that the summit has become a popular site for the scattering of ashes following cremation. |
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Following his cremation, his ashes were laid to rest below the Battle of Britain Memorial Window in the Royal Air Force chapel at Westminster Abbey. |
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They practised both inhumation and cremation, and produced caskets in various sizes, the most common of which are cinerary urns made of alabaster and terracotta. |
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A Granthi recited prayers at the cremation ground before the pyre was lit. |
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However, around 10 percent of those discovered during excavation had been placed on top of cremation urns, suggesting that they had a place in certain funerary rituals. |
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Grave goods feature in both inhumation and cremation burials. |
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Ten-pin bowling fanatic Tony Guarini, 48, from Pittsburgh, US, who is dying from cancer, has had a bowling ball urn made to contain his ashes after his cremation. |
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