Skip to main content

Christmas Ritual from Finland: visiting the cemetery

This week's post was inspired by the Finnish ritual of visiting cemeteries at Christmas.

It may not be everyone's idea of a perfect Christmas, but for religious and non-churchgoing Finns, taking candles to place on family graves on the 24th December is part of their annual tradition. Since the 1920s when candles became affordable, many Finns (up to around 75%  of Finnish families) will light the beginning of the Christmas period for their deceased relatives.
Snow lying crisp and even in Highgate Cemetery, London. You can search the cemetery's registers on the Deceased Online database 
Some take candles to a local cemetery where they do not have relatives - often to enjoy the peaceful, reflective experience of the candlelit graveyard.
In Finland, as with many of the cemeteries that feature in the collections of Deceased Online, graveyards are respected as places of calm for the living. Emphasis is placed on nurturing the trees and plants surrounding memorials. This results in cemeteries on Christmas Eve becoming candlelit sanctuaries, full of people, while remaining tranquil and respectful.
Meanwhile, in Britain it is not unusual for individuals or families to visit the graves of loved ones in order to include them in Christmas events. Some UK cemeteries also allow candles, lanterns or LED devices to light graves and memorials. Perhaps the Finns are inspiring a worldwide trend? 
Highgate Cemetery
If you are thinking of visiting deceased family members over the Christmas period, you may find the resting places of some ancestors on Deceased Online. And do follow the links in this blog to the home pages of cemeteries/crematoria to check Christmas opening hours.

Graves in a snowy Highgate Cemetery

Whether you choose to be like the Finns and visit cemeteries this Christmas, or if you just prefer staying and doing family history research, we hope you find the Deceased Online database useful this Yuletide. Do share your discoveries and photos with us in the Comments Box below or on our Twitter and Facebook pages.

However you choose to spend Christmas, everyone at Deceased Online wishes you a happy and peaceful festive season!

Sources

Fran Weaver, "Christmas Eve in a Candlelit Cemetery", This is Finland https://finland.fi/christmas/christmas-eve-in-a-candlelit-cemetery/https://finland.fi/christmas/christmas-eve-in-a-candlelit-cemetery/(accessed 20 Dec 2017)


Comments

  1. If you frequently travel abroad, a Roaming IoT SIM Card is your best option. A Roaming SIM card will enable you to make inexpensive calls to your home country. Many countries offer complimentary incoming conversations. Here is where the majority of your cost savings will be realized. The use of roaming mobile phones and foreign rates applicable to your destination may reduce your phone bill by as much as 90 percent compared to when you use your regular cell phone at home.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

New Maps Online for St Peter's Cemetery and Churchyard

New data for Scotland will be appearing on Deceased Online over the next couple of weeks. Here we give you an insight into our holdings on the cemeteries of Aberdeen. The ‘Granite City’, as Scotland's third largest city is known, features strongly in the Deceased Online database . You can search around 248,000 records from nine cemeteries and burial grounds, including St Nicholas Churchyard, Trinity Churchyard, Nigg Cemetery, John Knox Churchyard, St Peter's Cemetery - linked with Spital Churchyard, St Clement's Churchyard, Old Machar Churchyard, Grove Cemetery and Nellfield Cemetery. We have just added detailed grave location maps of Spitak (aka St Peter’s) Churchyard and St Peter’s Cemetery. Located in the north of the city, these two cemeteries form one vast graveyard. The Deceased Online database contains registers, which date from 1767, for over 160,000 burials. Besides the registers are the Dues Books. For the earliest dates these cover the date of burial...

Lambeth Cemetery

Records from the  London Borough of Lambeth's   Lambeth Cemetery in south London are now available to view on  www.deceasedonline.com .  Lambeth Cemetery , originally known as Tooting Cemetery , is home to a great many species of wildlife, including goldcrests, sparrowhawks, and woodpeckers, and provides the final resting place for over 250,000 people, including many famous music hall Victorians. Lambeth Cemetery The music hall was a popular Victorian brand of theatrical entertainment, and involved songs, comedy, speciality acts, and variety entertainment.  One giant figure of music hall was George Wild Galvin, better known as Dan Leno (1860-1904) , who was buried in Lambeth Cemetery. Dan Leno was a leading comedian and musical actor within music hall, and was also well known for his pantomime dame roles. His first solo stage appearance was at nine years old and, as a teen, he became the star of his family's act. By the late 1800s, Dan Leno was one of the highes...

Scottish Collection: Perthshire & Kinross, South Lanarkshire, Stirling, and West Lothian

This week completes our list of Scottish Collections and covers our records in Perthshire & Kinross, South Lanarkshire, Stirling, and West Lothian St Mary's Church St Mary's Scottish Episcopal Church. Looking north across the roundabout, from entrance road to golf course (Derek Ferris) Perthshire and Kinross Aberuthven Church & Cemetery Auchterarder Church & Cemeteries Arngask Old Church Cleish Church Cemetery, Kinross Dron Old Churchyard Dunkeld Church, Dowally Dunning St Serf's Churchyard Findo Gask Churchyard Forgandenny Churchyard Forteviot Churchyard Fowlis Wester Churchyard Glenfarg Cemetery Kilmaveonaig Church, Blair Atholl Logierait Church & Cemetery Luncarty Cemetery Portmoak Church & Extension, Kinross St Mary's Church, Birnam, Dunkeld Tenandry Old Churchyard, Killiecrankie Tibbermore Church Trinity Gask Churchyard South Lanarkshire Carnwath Parish Church Covington & Quothquan Churchyards Dalserf Old Churchyard Dunsyre Churchyard Forth ...