Brownlee, E. 2020

Brownlee, E.C. (2020) ‘The dead and their possessions: the declining agency of the cadaver in early medieval Europe’, European Journal of Archaeology, 23:3, 406-427.

Brunhoff, A. de 1978

Souls in Stone: European Graveyard Sculpture, New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf.

Bryan, V. 2015

William Faulkner in the age of the modern funeral industry’, The Southern Quarterly, 53:1, 25-40.

Buchanan, T. & Gabriel, P. 2015

Race differences in acceptance of cremation: religion, Durkheim, and death in the African American community’, Social Compass, 62:1, 22-42.

Buchholz, S., Blick, T., Hannig, K. & 8 others 2016

‘Biological richness of a large urban cemetery in Berlin. Results of a multi-taxon approach’, Biodiversity Data Journal, 4, e7057.

Buckberry, J. & Cherryson, A. 2010

Later Anglo-Saxon Burial c. 650-1100 AD, Studies in Funerary Archaeology. Oxford: Oxbow Press.

Buckham, S. 1999

“The men that worked for England they have their graves at home”: consumerist issues within the production and purchase of gravestones, in S. Tarlow & S. West (eds.) The Familiar Past? Archaeologies of Later Historical Britain, London: Routledge. 199-214.

Buckham, S. 2016

‘Not “architects of decay”: the influence of graveyard management on Scotland burial landscapes’, in S. Buckham, P.C. Jupp and J. Rugg (eds) Death in Modern Scotland, 1855-1955: Beliefs, Attitudes and Practices, Edinburgh: Peter Lang, 215-240.

Buckham, S. 2005

‘Delusions of grandeur? The influence of company management, civic pride and private sentiment upon the cemetery landscape at York’ in C. Denk & J. Ziesemer (eds) Der Bürgerliche Tod: Städtische Bestattungskulture von der Aufklärung bis zum frühen 20. Jahrhundert, ICOMOS: Munich, 114-52.

Buckham, S. 2003

‘Commemoration as an expression of personal relationships and group identities: a case study of York Cemetery’, Mortality, 8:2, 160-175.

Buckham, S., Jupp, P.C. and Rugg, J> (eds) 2016

Death in Modern Scotland, 1855-1955: Beliefs, Attitudes and Practices, Edinburgh: Peter Lang.

Budreau, L. 2011

Bodies of War: World War I and the Politics of Commemoration in America, 1919-1933, NYUP: New York.

Buettner, E. 2006

‘Cemeteries, public memory and Raj nostalgia in postcolonial Britain and India’, History and Memory, 18:1, 1-42.

Bugarelli, M. 1990

‘L’affare delle sepolture a Modena nella seconda metà del XVIII secolo. Questioni mediche, amministrative, techiche, architettoniche, militari’, Storia Urbani, 51 : 3-41.

Bullough, D. 1983

‘Burial, Community and Belief in the Early Medieval West’, in P. Wormwald (ed.) Ideal and Reality in Frankish and Anglo-Saxon Society, Oxford, Basil Blackwell, 177-201.

Burg, S. 2008

‘From troubled ground to common ground: the Locust Grove African-American Cemetery Restoration Project: a case study of service learning and community history’, The Public Historian, 30:2, 51-82.

Burgess, C. 2000

‘“Longing to be prayed for”: death and commemoration in an England parish in the later Middle Ages’, in B. Gordon and P. Marshall (eds) The Place of the Dead: Death and Remembrance in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,44-65.

Burgess, F. 1963

English Churchyard Memorials, London: Lutterworth Press.

Burima, M. 2015

‘Cemetery culture in border zone as a phoneomenon of comparative areas studies’, Comparative Studies, 6:2, 11-37.

Burkette, A. 2015

‘The burial ground: a bridge between language and culture’, Journal of Linguistic Geography, 3:2, 60-71.
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Events

The Cemetery Research Group runs two events a year: in May and in November. Follow the links and send in an abstract