Family Tree UK

Tales from the City of the Dead

The gothic grandeur of Highgate Cemetery has made it one of the most famous burial grounds in the world. Like Père Lachaise in Paris or the Protestant Cemetery in Rome, it is renowned for its macabre beauty as well as for being the final resting place of many famous figures. George Elliot, Christina Rossetti and Karl Marx are just a few of the 170,000 people who have been buried at Highgate over the years. These illustrious residents have made the Cemetery a place of pilgrimage for tourists and Londoners alike. In this article, we look at the history of this celebrated cemetery, sharing some of the secret stories that lurk amidst its crumbling, ivy-clad graves.

STYLE AND STATUS

The Cemetery was laid out by architect Stephen Geary, whose plans reflected contemporary tastes and fashions. Napoleon’s exploits in Egypt, for instance, had inspired a longstanding craze for ancient Egyptian design. This influenced Highgate’s famous ‘Egyptian Avenue’ and ‘Circle of Lebanon’, imposing arrangements of ornate burial vaults. They

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Family Tree UK

Family Tree UK2 min read
The Shetland FHS Monumental Inscription Project ‘Could Not Have Come Soon Enough’
Shetland Family History Society is a small society that has embarked on the ambitious project to photograph and transcribe all of the gravestones in Shetland, the goal being to provide an online database linking the images with the monumental inscrip
Family Tree UK5 min read
The value of INTERVIEWING OLDER RELATIVES
Hearing ancestors directly describe their lives in their own words through audio recordings can be incredibly valuable for future genealogists for several reasons. More personal connection: There is something very powerful about actually hearing an a
Family Tree UK5 min read
Your Letters
I have been interested in accounts that sometimes appear in Family Tree about lack of/ incorrect birth certificates and the problems it causes. Living in Spain, I am unable to pop to the local record office or churchyard! However, to follow are the d

Related