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It is called cremation. It is less expensive than a traditional funeral, and a casket is not required for burial. Ashes from the cremation are put into a urn, and from there the ashes are disposed of according to the wishes of the family of the deceased.
The coffins are stacked at different levels- no more damage than say a pile of books.
Basically the same found in the US; that means a wake ceremony, getting the coffin to the cemetery and burying it.
Urns or cremation urns for ashes of deceased. Coffin or casket for bodies. Vaults could enclose either at a Mausoleum.
Burying loved ones in coffins has been coming from the past. It is a ritual so is being followed.
the cost of a coffin can be prohibitive, no one dedicates their ashes to science for morbid studies Some religious beliefs have cremation as the way, some prefer the thought of not rotting in a coffin and it is cheaper than interment (being buried).
The king and duke hid the money in the coffin of Peter Wilks which they stole and filled with lead before burying it. They believed this was a secure hiding spot as no one would suspect a coffin to contain anything other than a body.
Well, first of all, who do you mean when you say "they", and if you are reffering to Jesus being crucified, then "they" put Jesus into the stone coffin. After "they" brutaly ripped Jesus' living body apart, hung him by his wrists (I believe) and feet/ancles, and murderd him, "they" (the people who hated God/Jesus and believed otherwise that Jesus was not the true masiah, but a demond) wrapped him in white cloth and set him in the stone coffin. The stone coffin was used the same way that we do with burying the dead, just in a different way. Instead of burying the dead in the ground, they would place them in tombs. Three days after they set Jesus in the coffin/tomb, he arose from the dead. (just as he said he would before this all happend) I hope I wasnt way off subject there.
The body is kept in the house for seven days before cremation and during the six evenings, monks come and pray. A picture of the person who has passed away can be found on the coffin.
The horse's coffin bone is located in each hoof of the animal. The hard tissue of the hoof encases the bone; thus called the coffin bone. Skulls and hooves are sometimes found in the burial places of the Indo-European people of the Copper Ages to the Middle Ages. These people found the horse very spiritual-like and had many rituals dealing with them including burying the hooves with the remains of a person.
One common practice was burying their dead in cemeteries or churchyards. Another practice was burying their dead in family plots or crypts. In some cultures, mass graves or burial mounds were also used.
stone coffin in which wood coffin was placed