Prelims
Funerary Practices in the Netherlands
ISBN: 978-1-78769-876-5, eISBN: 978-1-78769-873-4
Publication date: 19 September 2019
Citation
Mathijssen, B. and Venhorst, C. (2019), "Prelims", Funerary Practices in the Netherlands (Funerary International), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xxi. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78769-873-420191012
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2019 Brenda Mathijssen and Claudia Venhorst
Half Title Page
FUNERARY PRACTICES IN THE NETHERLANDS
Series Page
Funerary International Series
Series Editor: Julie Rugg, University of York, UK
The study of mortality is now an established academic endeavour which is rapidly expanding in scale and in disciplinary reach. One missing element is a repository of basic facts about funerary practice in each country and the broader legal, governance and denominational frameworks for those practices which might serve to set more detailed research in context.
This book series remedies this absence by producing country-specific monographs, with texts providing a standard framework of questions, which ensures even coverage, aids international comparison, fosters international linkages across the academic community and inspires new research directions. These texts will be a valuable resource for researchers across the humanities and social sciences concerned with death and funerary customs.
Previous titles in this series
Julie Rugg and Brian Parsons, Funerary Practices in England and Wales
Forthcoming in this series
Olga Nešporová, Funerary Practices in the Czech Republic
Christoph Streb, Funerary Practices in Germany
Aleksandra Pavićević, Funerary Practices in Serbia
Maija Butters and Ilona Pajari, Funerary Practices in Finland
Title Page
FUNERARY PRACTICES IN THE NETHERLANDS
BY
BRENDA MATHIJSSEN
University of Groningen, The Netherlands
CLAUDIA VENHORST
Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands
United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China
Copyright Page
Emerald Publishing Limited
Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK
First edition 2019
Copyright © 2019 Brenda Mathijssen and Claudia Venhorst. Published under exclusive licence.
Reprints and permissions service
Contact: permissions@emeraldinsight.com
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without either the prior written permission of the publisher or a licence permitting restricted copying issued in the UK by The Copyright Licensing Agency and in the USA by The Copyright Clearance Center. Any opinions expressed in the chapters are those of the authors. Whilst Emerald makes every effort to ensure the quality and accuracy of its content, Emerald makes no representation implied or otherwise, as to the chapters’ suitability and application and disclaims any warranties, express or implied, to their use.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-1-78769-876-5 (Print)
ISBN: 978-1-78769-873-4 (Online)
ISBN: 978-1-78769-875-8 (Epub)
List of Images
Chapter 2 | ||
Image 2.1. | Code of the Funeral Association Tot Aller Welzijn (‘For Everyone’s Wellbeing’). | 14 |
Image 2.2. | Image of the Westerveld Crematorium in Driehuis-Velsen in 1913, the Year of Its Opening. | 18 |
Chapter 4 | ||
Image 4.1. | A Small Auditorium in a Funeral Home in Overasselt, Gelderland. | 50 |
Chapter 6 | ||
Image 6.1. | An Example of a Contemporary Mourning Card, with Fictional Information, Based on Digital Templates. | 76 |
Image 6.2. | A Hearse, Characterised by the Triangular Flags with Three White Stripes at the Front. | 90 |
Image 6.3. | A Funeral Bicycle, Used to Transport the Deceased to the Cemetery or Crematorium. | 91 |
Image 6.4. | Religious Symbols at a Dutch Crematorium. | 93 |
Image 6.5. | Typical Mourning Card 1951. | 101 |
Image 6.6. | Typical Modern Mourning Card 2014. | 102 |
Chapter 7 | ||
Image 7.1. | Grave Candle Vending Machine at Rustoord Cemetery in Nijmegen, Gelderland. | 112 |
Image 7.2. | Roman Catholic Cemetery in Nijmegen, Gelderland. | 114 |
Image 7.3. | The Old Cemetery in Sauwerd, Groningen, with Protestant Headstones. | 117 |
Image 7.4. | Jewish Cemetery in Dwingeloo, Drenthe. | 119 |
Image 7.5. | Muslim Burial Site, Grave Plots at Municipal Cemetery Blerickse Bergen in Venlo, Limburg. | 120 |
Image 7.6. | Grave at a Natural Burial Ground in Blerick/Maasbree, Limburg. | 123 |
Image 7.7. | Open Air Auditorium at Natural Burial Ground in Blerick/Maasbree, Limburg. | 124 |
Image 7.8. | Canadian War Cemetery and Memorial in Groesbeek, Gelderland. | 124 |
Image 7.9. | ‘You are the sweetest dog’. A Memorial Plaque at the Pet Cemetery in Grashoek, Limburg. | 125 |
Image 7.10. | Overview of a Burial Plot at Municipal Cemetery Venlo, Limburg, with New Graves. | 127 |
Image 7.11. | Open Spaces at the Cemetery after Grave Plot Clearance. | 131 |
Image 7.12. | Esserveld Cemetery, Groningen: The Most Expensive Cemetery in the Netherlands. | 132 |
Image 7.13. | Balloon-decorated Grave to Celebrate the Deceased’s Birthday. | 135 |
Image 7.14. | Protestant Cemetery of Marken, Noord Holland. | 139 |
Image 7.15. | Roman Catholic Cemetery of Volendam, Noord Holland. | 139 |
Image 7.16. | Grave with the Hands at the Old Cemetery in Roermond, Limburg. | 141 |
Image 7.17. | An Elaborately Decorated Seventeenth-century Grave at the Portuguese Jewish Cemetery Beth Haim in Ouderkerk aan de Amstel, Noord Holland. | 146 |
Image 7.18. | A Recent Grave at the Portuguese Jewish Cemetery Beth Haim in Ouderkerk aan de Amstel, Noord Holland. | 147 |
Image 7.19. | Children’s Grave at the Muslim Cemetery in Venlo-Blerick, Limburg. | 149 |
Chapter 8 | ||
Image 8.1. | Early Twentieth-century Cremation Propaganda of the Vereeniging voor Facultatieve Lijkverbranding. | 154 |
Image 8.2. | A Building Plan of the Westerveld Crematorium. | 155 |
Image 8.3. | The Leiden Murderess Maria Catharina Swanenburg. | 165 |
Image 8.4. | Small Auditorium at a Crematorium in Gelderland. | 170 |
Image 8.5. | Witnessing the Charge of the Deceased at a Crematorium in Gelderland. | 173 |
Image 8.6. | The Technical Cremation Process: The Operator Removes the Cremated Remains. | 176 |
Image 8.7. | The Technical Cremation Process: After Cremulation the Ashes Are Placed in Ash Containers for Storage. | 177 |
Image 8.8. | The Ash Storage Room. | 179 |
Image 8.9. | Ash Scattering Garden at Crematorium Blerick, Limburg. | 182 |
Image 8.10. | Buckets Collecting Ortho Materials for Recycling. | 185 |
Chapter 9 | ||
Image 9.1. | A Commemoration Tree at an All Souls’ Event. | 190 |
List of Tables and Charts
Chapter 1 | ||
Table 1.1. | Migration in the Netherlands, 2018. | 7 |
Table 1.2. | Religious Affiliation in the Netherlands: Historical Development, 1830–2015. | 8 |
Chapter 4 | ||
Chart 4.1. | Number of Funeral Companies and Employees in 2007 and 2019. | 42 |
Chapter 5 | ||
Table 5.1. | Average Funeral Costs. | 59 |
Table 5.2. | Average Burial Costs. | 60 |
Table 5.3. | Average Cremation Costs. | 60 |
Chapter 6 | ||
Table 6.1. | Place of Death. | 68 |
Chapter 8 | ||
Table 8.1. | Development of Cremation in the Netherlands. | 158 |
Table 8.2. | Number of Crematoria in the Netherlands. | 160 |
Preface
Death is inevitable to each of us and to those we hold dear. It is a matter of existential concern. People’s experiences with death are highly diverse, and so are their funerary practices. They are influenced by regional customs, legal frameworks and personal preferences. Moreover, our responses to loss are shaped by our age, ethnicity, class, gender and religion, as well as by the type and time of a death, and our relationship to the deceased.
People’s varied experiences with death challenge researchers who want to study funerary repertoires. How does one describe a miscellaneous field of practices, beliefs and experiences? How can one grasp its changes over time? Many researchers, including us, solve this difficulty by bypassing it. We situate our specific (Dutch) context in a larger, seemingly homogeneous one: Europe or the West. Rather than unpicking the notion of ‘Western’ death practices and its political implications, we have created a myth of Western funerary culture.
In the writing and structuring of this book, the notion of Western death ways proved problematic. It has, for instance, been impossible to translate some funerary practices and legislations to a (partially) non-Dutch and English-speaking audience, without compromising on the cultural aspects and meanings. At many occasions we discussed whether we should refer to the ‘Dutch Burial and Cremation Act’ or the ‘Corpse Disposal Act’, and whether we should speak of autopsies and sections while the Dutch word lijkschouwing clearly indicates that the coroner primarily observes the corpse, rather than dissecting it.
The Funerary International Series provides accessible information on funerary practices in different (European) countries, and thereby aims to modestly unpick the notion of ‘Western’ funerary culture. This book does so for the Netherlands. It provides a concise introduction to contemporary funerary practices, and their historic, geographic, demographic, (multi)cultural and political context.
Although we have made a selection of funerary practices, as well as some simplifications to provide a clear and manageable overview, we want to emphasise the dynamics of funerary practices and the diversity of society. The Dutch funerary landscapes have been shaped by a Protestant majority in the North and a Roman Catholic majority in the South, by the segregation of society in pillars, by the arrival of migrants from the former colonies of Surinam and Indonesia, and from the Caribbean territories, as well as by the arrival of guest workers and refugees from the peripheries of Europe and elsewhere, by individualisation and secularisation, by emancipation movements, and by technical innovation. Thus although ‘the’ Dutch funerary culture does not exist, we look forward to offering you some insight into it.
Brenda Mathijssen and Claudia Venhorst
Acknowledgements
This book has been written with the support of many. We are especially grateful to all of our research participants. Many of you have shared your personal stories of loss, of conducting funerals and of experiencing bereavement. You have taught us about funerary practices and frameworks, and more importantly, about the associated emotions, creativity and resilience. Some of you have invited us to conduct fieldwork at funeral homes, cemeteries and crematoria, and have shown what it means to work in this field. Thank you for your openness. We hope that this book resonates with your own professional experiences, and provides a useful source in your future practice.
We are also deeply indebted to our current and former colleagues at the Department of Comparative Religion and the Centre for Thanatology at Radboud University Nijmegen; the Department of Comparative Study of Religion at the University of Groningen; the Centre for Death and Life Studies at Durham University; and the Department of Human Geography at the University of Reading. We especially like to thank Eric Venbrux, Peter Nissen and Thomas Quartier for supporting us from the very start and for introducing us to the fields of Death Studies and Religious Studies. Julie, a special thanks to you for sticking to the plan of making a Funerary International Series, and for entrusting the Dutch volume to us.
Finally, our deep gratitude is extended to Philippa Grand, Sophie Darling and Rachel Ward for their support and patience throughout the writing and editing process.
Map of The Netherlands
- Prelims
- Chapter 1 The Netherlands: An Introduction
- Chapter 2 History
- Chapter 3 Demographic and Legal Frameworks
- Chapter 4 The Funeral Directing Industry
- Chapter 5 Paying for Funerals
- Chapter 6 A Typical Funeral
- Chapter 7 Burial and Cemeteries
- Chapter 8 Cremation and Crematoria
- Chapter 9 Death and Remembrance in the Public Sphere
- Bibliography
- Index