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===Where to bury=== Apart from sanitary and other practical considerations, the site of burial can be determined by religious and socio-cultural considerations. Thus in some traditions, especially with an animistic logic, the remains of the dead are "banished" for fear their spirits would harm the living if too close; others keep remains close to help surviving generations. Religious rules may prescribe a specific zone, e.g. some Christian traditions hold that Christians must be buried in [[consecration|consecrated ground]], usually a cemetery;<ref>Crow, Madison; Zori, Colleen; Zori, Davide (17 December 2020). "Doctrinal and Physical Marginality in Christian Death: The Burial of Unbaptized Infants in Medieval Italy". Religions. 11 (12): 2. [https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/11/12/678/htm#B51-religions-11-00678 doi:10.3390/rel11120678].</ref> an earlier practice, burial in or very near the church (hence the word churchyard), was generally abandoned with individual exceptions as a high posthumous honour; also many existing funeral monuments and crypts remain in use. Royalty and high nobility often have one or more "traditional" sites of burial, generally monumental, often in a palatial chapel or cathedral. In North America, private family cemeteries were common among wealthy landowners during the 18th and 19th centuries. Many prominent people were buried in private cemeteries on their respective properties, sometimes in lead-lined coffins. Many of these family cemeteries were not documented and were therefore lost to time and abandoned; their grave markers having long since been pilfered by vandals or covered by forest growth. Their locations are occasionally discovered during construction projects. After [[interfaith marriage]], issues might arise regarding burial. As different religious traditions prescribe different locations for burial, a single burial location for a married couple is not always self-evident.<ref>{{Citation |title=Ten Mixed Families in a Divided World |date=2024-12-31 |work=Love Across Difference |pages=232β251 |url=https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781503640764-011/html |access-date=2025-03-26 |publisher=Stanford University Press |doi=10.1515/9781503640764-011 |isbn=978-1-5036-4076-4}}</ref>
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