I once went to a cemetery to uh ... *ahem* kill some time before i was to hang out with some friends at the park that this cemetery is located next to. It was an old cemetery too, with grave stones going back to the late 1800s.
Well, I think that's pretty different from what you are used to. This is the typical look.I'd love a chance to photograph those Italian burial niches though; I'm sure they're fascinating.
Well, if we count visiting for artistic or historical reasons, I saw the Vysehrad Cemetery in Prague this summer, and also the famous Old Jewish Cemetery. Very different experiences, both extremely fascinating.The last time I visited a cemetery was last spring in Athens. The first cemetery is pretty well-known for its often pompous or even pretentious grave monuments. I went there to see Heinrich Schliemann's grave, which is a miniature temple with reliefs that show him and his wife during the excavations at Troy.
^^ A lot of them, like the Blue Hills Cemetery, are nice and open, but not all. The Hancock Cemetery in Quincy Center (where John and John Quincy Adams used to be buried) is very small and cramped, as is the old one in Weymouth (well, it's larger than Quincy, but still feels claustrophobic). I'd love a chance to photograph those Italian burial niches though; I'm sure they're fascinating.
That's definitely different from what I imagined.Well, I think that's pretty different from what you are used to. This is the typical look.I'd love a chance to photograph those Italian burial niches though; I'm sure they're fascinating.
They were moved to the basement of the old historic church across the street, where they can still be visited by the public. I assume they were moved for safety. The Hancock Cemetery is right on Hancock Street in the middle of Quincy Center, which is a busy commercial area and right next to the Red Line. Their graves were located (well, still are, but empty) right inside the gate.Just out of curiosity, do you have any idea why the Adams' were moved to or why they were moved?
I had a feeling you were thinking about catacombs or something like that.That's definitely different from what I imagined.Well, I think that's pretty different from what you are used to. This is the typical look.I'd love a chance to photograph those Italian burial niches though; I'm sure they're fascinating.
I walked around one of the cemeteries in New Orleans last year. It was creepy as hell.
When was the last time you wentto a cemetary to visit a grave (rather than going to a cemetery for a funeral)?
Have you ever gone to a cemetery because you have been researching your family tree?
Well, I think that's pretty different from what you are used to. This is the typical look.I'd love a chance to photograph those Italian burial niches though; I'm sure they're fascinating.
When was the last time you wentto a cemetary to visit a grave (rather than going to a cemetery for a funeral)?
Exactly.I had a feeling you were thinking about catacombs or something like that.That's definitely different from what I imagined.Well, I think that's pretty different from what you are used to. This is the typical look.
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