All posts tagged: burials

Hull funeral director Robert Bush admits preventing 30 burials – as families say he should ‘rot in jail’ | UK News

Hull funeral director Robert Bush admits preventing 30 burials – as families say he should ‘rot in jail’ | UK News

A funeral director – dubbed “a monster” by his victims – has pleaded guilty to 30 counts of preventing a lawful burial. Dozens of bodies and ashes from different people were recovered from a funeral home in Hull in March 2024. Some of the remains had been stored in varying states of decay for nearly a year after relatives thought they had been buried or cremated. Robert Bush initially denied all the charges, but changed his pleas at Hull Crown Court on Thursday to admit preventing the lawful and decent burials of 30 bodies. The 48-year-old was charged after police found human remains at his premises, including those of four unborn babies. You need javascript enabled to view this content Enable javascript to share Share Watch: Police arrest footage of funeral director Robert Bush Image: Robert Bush’s crimes were uncovered in 2024 Standing in the dock, the funeral director pleaded guilty to each of the allegations one by one. He was bailed until his sentencing hearing on 27 July. Bush also previously denied one charge …

Medieval elite still received fancy burials despite disease stigma

Medieval elite still received fancy burials despite disease stigma

Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. Wealth confers privilege, and for many people during the Middle Ages, this privilege extended into the afterlife. For centuries, rich Christians often flaunted their money by purchasing gravesites as close to their church as possible. The trend often mirrored their relationship with religion before their deaths, too—nobility and knights frequently ensured they sat in the front pews of services. Money is only one facet of social relations, however. Communities have long discriminated against and ostracized residents with debilitating illnesses—especially those with outward physical effects. And in Europe, the medieval era was particularly disease-ridden. But what happened when money and social stigma collided? To find out, an international research team recently surveyed skeletal remains from five medieval cemeteries in Denmark—three in urban areas and two in rural regions. They were especially interested in identifying bodies with clear indications of two of the era’s most prevalent and highly infectious diseases: tuberculosis and leprosy. Although a person can host a tuberculosis infection …