The relationship between the living and the dead was especially
significant in defining community identity and spiritual belief in
the early medieval world. Peter Brown has called it the "joining of
Heaven and Earth." For clerics and laypersons alike, funerals and
burial sites were important means for establishing or extending
power over rival families and monasteries and commemorating
ancestors. In Caring for Body and Soul, Bonnie Effros reveals the
social significance of burial rites in early medieval Europe during
the time of the Merovingian (or so-called long-haired) kings from
500 to 800 C.E.
Funerals provided an opportunity for the display of wealth
through elaborate ceremonies involving the placement of goods such
as weapons, jewelry, and ceramic vessels in graves and the use of
aboveground monuments. In the late seventh century, however, these
practices gave way to Masses and prayers for the dead performed by
clerics at churches removed from cemeteries. Effros explains that
this shift occurred not because inhabitants were becoming better
Christians, as some have argued, since such activities were never
banned or even criticized by the clergy. Rather, clerics
successfully promoted these new rites as powerful means for
families to express their status and identity.
Effros uses a wide range of historical and archaeological
evidence that few other scholars have mastered. The result is a
revealing analysis of life and death that simultaneously underlines
the remarkable adaptability and appeal of western Christianity in
the early Middle Ages.
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