| Exhumation in its simplest term, means the removal from
the ground of a body or cremated human remains. It also covers the
disturbance of remains within a grave, particularly when a grave is
re-opened for burial.
There are many applications per year to exhume human
remains for varying reasons. These can be from personal family
reasons to mass exhumations for town developments. To exhume human
remains, you must first apply for an exhumation licence before it
can take place. There are 2 types of licence available for
exhumation - a Bishops Faculty and a Home Office Licence. Normally
you will either need one or the other, although there are certain
circumstances where you may require both.
Within burial grounds, the land is termed either Consecrated or
Unconsecrated. The term 'consecrated' means dedicated to the
service of God according to the rites of the Church of England. A
Bishop to the Church of England carries out consecration of
land.
The type of ground from which remains are to be exhumed, and
also where they are going to be exhumed to, determines the
exhumation licence that is required. If human remains are to be
exhumed from a grave in consecrated ground to be re-interred in
consecrated ground in another burial ground, you will only need to
apply for a Bishops Faculty. Under certain circumstances where
remains are being moved from consecrated ground, to be either
re-interred in the same consecrated grave plot or unconsecrated
ground, both a Bishops Faculty and a Home Office Licence will be
required.
If an exhumation is to be carried out from unconsecrated ground
to either unconsecrated/consecrated ground, only a Home Office
licence is needed. A Bishops Faculty can be obtained by application
to the Church of England Diocese for the area where the deceased is
interred. The address can be found in the 'Crockfords Clerical
Directory'. There may be a charge for the application which can
take 4 to 6 weeks to come through.
You can apply for a Home Office Licence from:
Floor 5, Allington Towers, 19 Allington Street, London SW1R 5EB.
Tel: 020 7035 5530
There is a charge for this licence.
An application may not take very long to come through. Part of
this form must be filled in by the burial authority. Written
authorisation must also be sent from the cremation authority if the
remains are to be cremated after being exhumed.
Normally, a specialised exhumation firm will carry out the
removal of the remains. They are generally carried out early in the
morning and an environmental health officer for the local authority
will be in attendance along with a funeral director and council
burials staff.
It can be expensive as you have the actual expense of the
exhumation, a new outer coffin and the cost of either a burial or
cremation. If an exhumation takes place in a Telford & Wrekin
Council cemetery and the grave is now empty, the owner of the grave
can sell back the burial rights to the authority, at the previous
purchase
price. |