Yes, contact your parish priest.
The roman catholic church does not require ashes to be buried in a consecrated cemetery because is not according to the doctrine of the Catholic church.
No, non-Catholic spouses of Catholics can usually be buried in a Catholic cemetery.
Yes, a cremated Catholic can be buried in a Catholic cemetery.
Mount Hope Catholic Cemetery was created in 1898.
St. Mary's Roman Catholic Cemetery was created in 1858.
The only requirement for a Catholic cemetery is that it be set aside and appropriately blessed by a priest. There is no regulation as to its layout.
St. John the Baptist Byzantine Catholic Cemetery was created in 1923.
In Italy.ANSWER 2:Italians live in many countries, including America, and the majority of them who die aren't shipped back to Italy for burial. The average Italian is Roman Catholic and, therefore, after having had a requiem mass, would be buried in a Catholic cemetery where the ground has been consecrated by a priest.
At the end of the play they are both dead. Assuming that they are in a Catholic country (as Venice and its colonies certainly were) they would be buried separately. Othello, as a suicide, could not be buried in consecrated ground, but Desdemona would be buried in a proper cemetery.
Generally, non-Catholics may be buried in a Catholic cemetery if their spouse is Catholic and they will be buried in the same cemetery.
Yes! it can be buried because Catholic is also their brothers.
Louis J. Joseph has written: 'Mount Calvary Cemetery' -- subject(s): Calvary Cemetery (Youngstown, Ohio), Genealogy, Inscriptions, Registers of births 'The German Catholic cemetery known as Saint Joseph's Church Cemetery and the old Catholic cemetery known as Rose Hill Cemetery' -- subject(s): Genealogy, German Americans, Inscriptions, Registers of births, Rose Hill Cemetery (Youngstown, Ohio), Saint Joseph's Church Cemetery (Youngstown, Ohio)