If an individual is buried in a national military cemetery, then the surviving spouse has a legal right to be buried next to her/him. For instance, Jackie Bouvier Kennedy Onassis is buried next to John Kennedy, as she requested.
William Howard Taft and John F. Kennedy.
A scattering garden is a place in a cemetery where families can spread the ashes of their loved ones.
General George S. Patton, Jr, is buried in the American Battle Monuments Commission Cemetery in Luxembourg, in Plot P, Row 1, Grave 1. The cemetery is near Luxembourg City. Patton is one of the 5,076 American servicemen buried in this cemetery, which covers 50.5 acres. An additional 376 missing are commemorated on the "Tablets of the Missing" at this cemetery. The cemetery is one of twenty the ABMC maintains in Europe containing the dead of WWI and WWII whose families elected after the wars to leave their loved ones among their comrades. It is American soil in perpetuity. Patton lingered long enough after his injury that his wife, Beatrice, was able to fly from the states to be at his side. She had the option of having his remains returned to the states, as did the family of the lowliest private. Beatrice said she thought he would appreciate more resting among his men.
necropolis This word however may be used for any ancient cemetery, not just for Etruscan ones. There are also Egyptian necropolises, for example.
They are the ones who carry the coffin/casket into the church and then to the cemetery or crematorium..
Boot Hill Cemetery, Is what I'm guessing you are looking for. It used to be where the Dodge City Country Club is now Located. The bodies, the ones they could find at least, were moved to Maple Grove Cemetery when the Country club was constructed.
If you are referring to Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy, her ashes were buried at sea with the ashes of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Jr. shortly after their tragic deaths from a plane crash in July of 1999. The remains of the married couple, along with Carolyn's sister Lauren's remains were scattered in a private ceremony on the USS Briscoe on July 22nd that accorded the Kennedys and Bessettes the opportunity to give their loved ones a private and civilian farewell. They were buried close to the spot where their airplane had crashed on July 16th off the coast of Martha's Vineyard.
yes the vikings did bury their dead. they buried them with the stuff they needed for the afterlife. some were buried and some were cremated. the ones that chose to get buried their the ones who got buried with treasure they needed in the afterlife.
colombia celebrates this day by going to the cemetery and honoring there loved ones that has died
If you are still legally married, you can be held responsible. That would be the benefit of getting a divorce.
they buried their loved ones with their pets, espcially cats as they were seen as lucky, the also buried them with all their possessions, kings and queens were buried in tombs in pyramids to keep them safe in the afterlife.
if a judge issues the judgment than yes but I hardly see the point.