During
the late Stone Age cremation began to spread across northern
Europe, as evidenced by particularly informative finds of decorative
pottery urns in western Russia among the Slavic peoples.
With
the advent of the Bronze Age -- 2500 to 1000 B.C. -- cremation
moved into the British Isles and into what is now Spain and Portugal.
Cemeteries for cremation developed in Hungary and northern Italy,
spreading to northern Europe and even Ireland.
In
the Mycenaean Age -- circa 1000 B.C. -- cremation became an integral
part of the elaborate Grecian burial custom. In fact, it
became the dominant mode of disposition by the time of Homer in
800 B.C. and was actually encouraged for reasons of health and
expedient burial of slain warriors in this battle-ravaged country.
Following
this Grecian trend, the early Romans probably embraced cremation
some time around 600 B.C. and it apparently became so prevalent
that an official decree had to be issued in the mid 5th Century
against the cremation of bodies within the city.
By
the time of the Roman Empire -- 27 B.C. to 395 A.D. -- it was
widely practiced, and cremated remains were generally stored in
elaborate urns, often within columbarium-like buildings.
Prevalent
though the practice was among the Romans, cremation was rare with
the early Christians who considered it pagan and in the Jewish
culture where traditional sepulcher entombment was preferred.
However,
by 400 A.D., as a result of Constantine's Christianization of
the Empire, earth burial had completely replaced cremation except
for rare instances of plague or war, and for the next 1,500 years
remained the accepted mode of disposition throughout Europe.
Modern cremation, as we know it, actually began only a little
over a century ago, after years of experimentation into the development
of a dependable chamber. When Professor Brunetti of Italy
finally perfected his model and displayed it at the 1873 Vienna
Exposition, the cremation movement started almost simultaneously
on both sides of the Atlantic.
In
the British Isles, the movement was fostered by Queen Victoria's
surgeon, Sir Henry Thompson. Concerned with hazardous health
conditions, Sir Henry and his colleagues founded the Cremation
Society of England in 1874. The first crematories in Europe
were built in 1878 in Woking, England and Gotha, Germany.
Meanwhile
in North America, although there had been two recorded instances
of cremation before 1800, the real start began in 1876 when Dr.
Julius LeMoyne built the first crematory in Washington, Pennsylvania.
In
1884 the second crematory opened in Lancaster, Pennsylvania and,
as was true of many of the early crematories, it was owned and
operated by a cremation society. Other forces behind early
crematory openings were Protestant clergy who desired to reform
burial practices and the medical profession concerned with health
conditions around early cemeteries.
Crematories
soon sprang up in Buffalo, New York, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Detroit
and Los Angeles. By 1900, there were already 20 crematories
in operation, and by the time that Dr. Hugo Erichsen founded the
Cremation Association of America in 1913, there were 52 crematories
in North America and over 10,000 cremations took place in that
year.
In
1975, the name was changed to the Cremation Association of North
America to be more indicative of the membership composition of
the United States and Canada. At that time, there were over
425 crematories and nearly 150,000 cremations.
In
1999, there were 1,468 crematories and 595,617 cremations, a percentage
of 25.39% of all deaths in the United States.