Dictionary Definition
mortician n : one whose business is the
management of funerals [syn: undertaker, funeral
undertaker, funeral
director]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- An undertaker or funeral director
Extensive Definition
A funeral director (also known as a mortician or
undertaker) is someone involved in the business of funeral rites. The job often
entails the burial or
cremation of the dead,
as well as the planning and arrangement of the actual funeral
ceremony.
In the United
Kingdom, a funeral director is someone who directs the funeral,
a mortician is someone who works in a mortuary, and an undertaker
normally refers in modern times to the person who actually does the
carrying (vehicularly or by hand) of the deceased. However, the
word "undertaker" in the UK was the name given to members of other
professions, e.g. cabinet makers or carpenters, who had the tools
and skills to make coffins or caskets, and who therefore were able
to "undertake" funerals as a part of their work. In modern times
the term "undertaker" is seen as old-fashioned within the "Funeral
Service", but is still the most commonly used term by many
people.
Funeral directors are responsible for meeting
with the family of the deceased to make arrangements for the
funeral service. The director is also responsible for preparing the
deceased for the service by means of embalming, dressing and
casketing, and applying
cosmetics. However,
not all funeral directors are embalmers and vice versa. Many
jurisdictions require separate licenses for funeral direction and
embalming.
History
The modern profession of being a mortician
started in England in the 1700s. Before it, officers of the
College
of Arms – a government heraldic authority – directed funerals.
The family of the deceased had to contact a member of the College
of Arms to manage the funeral. The family also had to hire and
coordinate the efforts of others involved in the funeral, such as
surgeons, plumbers, coffin
makers, upholsterers, carpenters, tailors, drapers, and other contractors.
Once the new profession was established, morticians would organize
the entire arrangements of the funeral, and the family would only
have to rely on them. The first mortician, according to Sir Anthony
Wagner, was William
Russel, a coffin maker who had set up the business as early as
1688.
Morticians have expanded further and have
encroached on what used to be seen as the job of the clergy. Their
job gradually grew to include more intensive involvement funeral
service (rather than mere organization), and hiring ministers for
families without church membership. They also worked at
transferring the location of the funeral from the church to the
funeral home, because there they could establish clear authority
over the funeral service.
Most modern day funeral homes are run as family
businesses. The majority of morticians work in these small,
family-run funeral homes. The owner usually hires two or three
other morticians to help him. Often, this hired help is in the
family, perpetuating the family's ownership. Most funeral homes
have one or more viewing rooms, a preparation room for embalming, a
chapel, and a casket-selection room. They usually have a hearse for transportation of
bodies, a flower car, and limousines. They also normally have
choices of caskets and urns for families to purchase or rent.
Evolution of the industry is continuing today. While most funeral
homes are still operated by families, larger and more centralized
organizations are coming to prominence. This shift towards larger
and less personal organizations can largely be attributed to
changing societal views toward the death process, such as the
institutionalization of death. Preservation of the body is
important if relatives are coming from far distances and the
funeral takes place long after the death. Embalming is also useful
when the body is needed as evidence in a criminal charge.
Modern methods of embalming allow for
preservation of the body for over a year. While most cultures
embalm using modern techniques, many cultures still embalm their
dead by exposing the body to the sun and air in hot climates. Six
years later, two practical experimenters, independently published
the results of their cremation experiments. In 1873, Professor
Brunetti of Padua displayed ashes, along with a model of his
furnace, at the Great Exhibition at Vienna. In the autumn of 1874,
the first European cremation outside of Italy took place in
Breslau,
Poland (in what was then the German Empire), followed by another in
Dresden, Germany. In America, the first man to be cremated was the
poor Austrian nobleman Baron de Palm, on December 6,
1876. The idea
slowly caught on, but was resisted by the funeral industry which
had built a highly profitable industry, and saw cremation as a
threat. Cremation might have gained acceptance largely because it
was viewed as a much simpler and less ostentatious (Prothero,1).
Cremation might have been the modest alternative, but funeral
directors soon began to see an economic opportunity, and began to
incorporate cremations into the business, by featuring elaborate
caskets and urns, floral arrangements, mausoleums, and even
embalming.
Employment opportunities
Employment opportunities for funeral directors are expected to be good, particularly for those who also embalm. However, mortuary science graduates may have to relocate to find jobs.See also
References
mortician in German: Bestatter
mortician in Italian: Necroforo
mortician in Dutch: Begrafenisondernemer
mortician in Swedish:
Begravningsentreprenör