Funeral (pronounced fyoo-ner-uhl)
(1) The ceremonies for a dead person prior to burial or
cremation; the obsequies. Technically, it’s
distinguished from a memorial service by the presence of the corpse although,
for various reasons, this is not absolute.
(2) The processional element of such a ceremony.
(3) The sermon delivered at a burial (obsolete).
1350–1400: From the Middle English adjective funeral, from the Medieval Latin fūnerālia (funeral rites), originally the
neuter plural from the adjective fūnerālis
(having to do with a funeral), the construct being fūner- (stem of fūnus (funeral
rites; death, corpse) + -ālis (the
third-declension two-termination suffix (neuter -āle) used to form adjectives of relationship from nouns or
numerals). The origin of the Latin forms (In Classical
Latin the adjective was funebris) is
unknown, the common speculation linking to the primitive Indo-European dhew (to die). The noun emerged in the early sixteenth
century, probably from the Middle French plural funerailles, from the Medieval Latin fūnerālia, neuter plural of fūnerālis
and the singular and plural were used
interchangeably in English until circa 1700.
In Elizabethan times, funeral
operated also as transitive verb in the sense of "to mourn". The adjective funereal dates
from 1725, influenced by the Middle French funerail, from the Latin fūnereus, from fūnus. The Middle
English forms from Latin via French displaced the native Old English līcþeġnung (literally the helpfully
descriptive “dead body service”).
Funeral differs from burial, cremation, entombment,
inhumation, interment & planting in that those words refer to a method
whereas funeral concerns the ceremonial aspects; the words obsequies, sepulture
& solemnities more synonymous although, historically, the closest was
probably the obsolete exequy (the
also obsolete exsequy the alternative
form), a back-formation from exequies,
from the Middle English exequies,
from the Old French exequies, from the
Latin exsequiās, accusative of exsequiae (train of followers). Funeral appears in many European languages
with the odd variation in spelling but in Portuguese, the velório (wake) is a more common reference. The adjective funerary (pertaining to funerals
or burials) dates from the 1690s, from Late Latin funerarius. The adjective funest (portending death) emerged in the
1650s and had been obsolete since the late eighteenth century except as a poetic
device; it was from the fourteenth century French funeste (unlucky), from the Latin funestus (causing death, destructive; mournful) from fūnus (“funeral rites" in this
sense) The related funestal was from a century earlier and died even sooner. Funeral is a noun & adjective (the verb
long obsolete), funereal, funerary & (the obsolete) funebrial are adjectives, funereally an adverb and funeralize is a
verb; the noun plural is funerals. The
adjective funereal is used to refer to anything grim and dour rather than
funeral as such and in idiomatic use, to say “it will be your funeral” is to
suggest there will be unpleasant consequences if some course of action is
followed.
In English, undertaker was an agent noun from the verb
undertake, the early meaning, strictly speaking, "a contractor of any sort
hired to perform some task" but it was applied mostly to those engaged is
some sort of commercial enterprise.
There had long been instances of the use of “funeral-undertaker” but by
the 1690s, “undertaker” had come to mean almost exclusively those whose
profession was to “embalm and bury”.
Most etymologists conclude this organic shift to linguistic exclusivity
came via the word being used as a euphemism for the mechanics of the
profession, matters of mortality something of a taboo topic.
Undertaker faded from use as “mortician” and “funeral
director” came to be preferred, firstly in the US with the latter soon becoming
the standard form in the rest of the English-speaking world. It was at the July 1895 meeting of the
Funeral Directors' Association of Kentucky that it was proclaimed “…an
undertaker will no longer be known as an "undertaker and embalmer."
In the future he will be known as the "mortician." This soon spread and the term undertaker is
now almost unknown except in historic references or in figurative use in fields
such as politics and sport. In general
use, the words "undertake", "undertaken" or
"undertaking" are now used to describe just about any activity and
with no sense of a taint of association with corpses.
In the narrow technical sense, even in modern use, the
terms funeral director, mortician, and undertaker mean the same thing (a person
who supervises or conducts the preparation of the dead for burial and directs
or arranges funerals" Nuances have
however emerged, especially in the US where a funeral director tends to be
someone who owns or operates a funeral home whereas the term mortician implies
a technical role, a person who handles the body (the embalmer) in preparation
for a funeral. Often of course, these
roles are combined, especially in smaller operations so for practical purposes,
funeral director and mortician are generally interchangeable and the place a funeral
director or mortician works is usually called either a funeral parlor or
funeral home. Although it would probably
once have seemed a bizarre construction, there are also now funeral celebrants
who officiate at ceremonies not (or only vaguely) connected with religious
practice and are thus analogous to the civil celebrants who perform secular
marriage ceremonies. They're not
directly connected with the school of thought which prefers to "celebrate
a life" rather than "mourn a death" at a funeral, an approach
which can be taken even in an overtly religious service.
So it's largely a matter of how those within the
profession prefer to style themselves and Funeral Director seems now the most
popular choice although mortician remains widely used in the US. Mirriam-Webster helpful suggests provides:
Funeral Director: A person whose job is to arrange and
manage funerals.
Mortician: A person whose job is to prepare dead people
to be buried and to arrange and manage funerals.
Undertaker: One whose business is to prepare the dead for
burial and to arrange and manage funerals.
In the United Kingdom and some Commonwealth countries, a
pauper's funeral was a funeral for a pauper paid for by the state, originally
under the terms of the under the English Poor Law (last codified in 1834 but
with legislative antecedents which stretched back centuries. The common law right of the dead to a
dignified burial was first recognized in England in R v Stewart, 12 AD. & E. 773 (1840) and was thus an early
recognition of basic human rights. The
phrase "pauper's funeral" is now not widely used in formal discourse
but apparently remains undertakers slang and, around the old British Empire,
local authorities quietly conduct thousands of funerals a year. Although not a "State Funeral" as
defined, each is a funeral paid for by the state.
Top - Ceremonial funerals: Diana, Princess of Wales (1961-1997) (left), Duke of Edinburgh (1921-2021) (centre) & Baroness Thatcher (1925-2013 (right).
Bottom - State Funerals: George V (1865-1936) (left), George VI (1895-1952) (centre) & Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965 (right).
So, when Lord Salisbury (1893–1972) was asked by one of Winston Churchill’s (1874-1965; UK prime-minister 1940-1945 & 1951-1955) private secretaries what a State Funeral was, in answering “A funeral paid for by the state” he was only partly correct, a State Funeral in the UK requiring uniquely the consent of both houses of parliament: the Commons and the Lords Spiritual & Temporal. In the UK, the state funeral has long been a rare thing and in recent years it’s become more exclusive still, Elizabeth II’s upcoming event only the sixth in the last hundred years of which two were not departed sovereigns, the last being Churchill’s in 1965. The big, set piece, televised events which look like State Funerals such as those of the Queen Mother (1900-2002 and Diana, Princess of Wales (1961-1997) were styled as “ceremonial funerals” and over the same period there have been eight of these. There has been speculation about the form Elizabeth’s funeral (operation "London Bridge", planned since 1962) will take, some suggesting it will, befitting the end of an era, be a glittering, elaborate spectacle which will contrast with the later coronation of Charles III, that expected to be something simpler than the last in 1953, reflecting the changed times. It's not known how many people, over the years, have been involved in planning "London Bridge" but as a comparison, some sources claim 277 souls were on the committee which designed the State Funeral of Kim Il-sung (Kim I, 1912-1994; The Great Leader of the DPRK (North Korea (1948-1994)).
Not all jurisdictions treat them as such rarified
events. While governments have different
rules for state funerals, few show the largess of the Australian states
which grant them to well-behaved pop singers and reasonably successful football
coaches though, being obviously symbolic, they serve many purposes: both Adolf
Hitler (1889-1945, Nazi head of government 1933-1945 & head of state
1934-1945) and Comrade Stalin (1878–1953; Soviet leader 1922-1953) attended (as chief mourner) a number of state funerals where the deceased had been murdered on their orders.
Mormon Funeral Potatoes
Although often called Mormon
Funeral potatoes (although the same general recipe also produces great
potatoes, cheesy potatoes, hash brown casserole, cheesy hash browns & party
potatoes), the unusual combination of potatoes and toppings is popular beyond
Utah as a traditional potato hotdish or casserole in the US West and
Midwest. The name "funeral
potatoes" comes from the frequency with which the side-dish is served at
funerals where it's popular not only because of tradition but the ease with
which it can be transported and re-heated.
It remains a standard component of funerals conducted by The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormons). Although there are variations, the recipe
usually includes hash browns or cubed potatoes, some type of cheese, onions, a
cream soup (chicken, mushroom, or celery) or sauce, sour cream, and a topping
of butter with corn flakes or (latterly) crushed potato chips.
Preparation time: 10 minutes
Cooking time: 50-55 minutes
Serving time: 10 minutes
Ingredients
20 oz frozen hash browns, slightly defrosted
2 cups of a cheese which melts well (cheddar, mozzarella
etc)
1.5 cup of sour cream
1 can of cream soup (alternatively use 1 cup of stock concentrate
and increase sour cream to 2 cups)
8 tablespoons of butter, melted
1 cup of corn flakes
1 cup of fried onions
Salt, pepper to taste
Instructions
(1) Pre-heat oven to 330o F (165o C) and
butter baking tray.
(2) In large bowl, thoroughly mix hash browns, sour cream,
chicken soup, dried onion, butter, salt and pepper and cheese.
(3) Put mixture in baking tray, spreading to an even depth.
(4) Evenly sprinkle cornflakes on top by gently crushing them.
(5) Bake for 50-55 minutes. Allow to cool down for 10 minutes before
serving.
The Machete funeral hearse
Lindsay Lohan in habit, emerging from hearse in Machete (2010). The Machete hearse was based on a 1987 Cadillac Brougham (1987-1992).
Between 1931-1979, General Motors' Cadillac division offered a line called the Cadillac Commercial Chassis, a long-wheelbase, heavy-duty platform which was mechanically complete but with a partially built body (without bodywork rear of the windscreen, doors and other panels included on request). Produced on the D platform (exclusive to Cadillac), the Commercial Chassis was used by coach-builders to create high-roofed ambulances, hearses (often called funeral coaches in the US) and cleverly designed hybrids which at short notice could be converted from ambulances to hearses or used by a coroner's staff to transport a corpse; they were popular in towns with small populations. The early Commercial Chassis were based on the Series 355 (1931-1935) and the Series 75 (1936-1992) from 1936 and although there were specific modification to the frame, the mechanical components were always shared with the 75 which, used for the big limousines, meant costs were amortized across the ranges. After 1980, production continued on the downsized platform but there was no longer a separate D platform, the partially bodied cars structurally identical to the mainstream line. The landau irons (which some coachbuilders insist should be called "carriage bars") on the rear side-panels emulate in style (though not function) those used on horse-drawn carriages and early automobiles (the last probably the Mercedes-Benz 300 (the “Adenauer”; W186 (1951-1957) & W189 (1957-1962)) Cabriolet D). On those vehicles, the irons actually supported the folding mechanism for the fabric roof but on hearses they are merely decorative, there to relieve the slab-sidedness of the expanse of flat metal.
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