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73 ʻAho 2 Houa 21 Miniti

Falaite 6 Maʻasi 2026, 11:30 PM (GMT+0)

This session language is English
This session is online
2026

Poor, Pauper, or Pragmatic? Victorian Burial and Identity

Based on original research into burial practices in Victorian cities, this talk explores how the treatment of the dead reflected the values, identities, and struggles of the living. In Britain’s fast-growing industrial cities, burial was shaped not just by grief, but by class, religion, migration, and public health. Whether an individual was laid to rest in a family plot, a pauper’s grave, or excluded altogether, these final decisions reveal powerful stories about social status, belief systems, and community belonging.

Using case studies from burial registers, newspaper inquests, and municipal records, we’ll uncover how families navigated the politics and practicalities of death in the 19th century. From Catholic exclusion to overcrowded cemeteries and burial club economies, this talk reveals what lies beneath the surface of Victorian graveyards. Attendees will also receive practical tips on how to interpret burial sources and uncover hidden details about their urban ancestors, especially those missing from traditional records.

Fakamatala ne Fokotuʻu Maí


Thumbnail ki he Victorians to Elizabethans: British research in the twentieth century
This session language is English
Thumbnail ki he Funeral Traditions in the Victorian Era
This session language is English
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Thumbnail ki he Metropolitan Ancestors: Finding Families in Georgian and Victorian London
This session language is English
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Kau ʻi he Fepōtalanoaʻakí