I’m sure there’s a wealth of information about this on the internet, but I’m not coming up with the correct search terms apparently…
I’m looking for death mythology/religious beliefs about the necessity of keeping a body intact at the time of burial so that the dead can go onto the afterlife.
I know that I’ve heard multiple accounts that were in the forms of people X believing that their bodies need to be kept whole, or purposely burning or dismembering the bodies of enemies to prevent them from being at peace afterlife (also their spirits are condemed to roam the earth forever).
I can’t recall any specific people who believed these things, though. Can you?
I was just wondering about this myself. Our associate rector (a Lutheran, although affiliated with my Episcopalian church) was talking about how the stigma against cremation in his denomination has almost entirely vanished just since his childhood.
I don’t believe it’s related to the afterlife per se, but Jewish tradition insists on intact bodies at burial. It’s a bit of a shame, too, as it interferes with autopsies and (much more important) organ donation. There are prominent Jewish organizations that encourage organ donation, but my own parents were raised in a somewhat more conservative tradition, and so convincing them that my useful guts should be used to save lives if something regrettable happens to me is … difficult.
Culturally conservative or religiously conservative? If the latter, the HODS website might help.
Are we talking current religions, or dead (heh) ones, too? Because the Egyptians were pretty renown for preserving their dead.
ETA: The Jewish tradition comes from the belief that the soul is hovering around watching the body (at least until burial). Thus, a corpse has to be treated with the utmost respect, and kept intact, because the deceased will be very upset. I don’t have time to go into it because I’m in an edit, but there’s extensive discussion on the matter.