Coffin guard

Dublin Core

Title

Coffin guard

Subject

Highlands

Description

This is a coffin guard or mort safe and is designed to prevent body snatchers stealing the corpse of someone who has recently died.
In the early 18th century medical schools in Scotland started to use dissection methods to teach the medical sciences. They general used executed criminals, but found demand out stripped supply. This gave rise to a trade in body snatching, stealing bodies from fresh graves and selling them to anatomists.
The practice shocked society, but no effective deterrent was found until around 1816 when the iron coffin guard was invented. It was placed around and over the coffin. This one is missing its lid. It would protect the body until it had decayed suitably to make body snatching undesirable to the thieves.
These were expensive to make, so only the rich could afford them. Sometimes churches would buy them and hire them out. This guard was from the old Glen Nevis cemetery in Fort William. It is one of the museum’s most sinister objects.

Creator

Victorian

Source

objects,highlandlife

Date

19th century

Contributor

eulac3d

Type

Physical Object

Identifier

92

Date Modified

12/03/2021

Extent

L 2050 mm x W 730 mm

Medium

West Highland Museum

Spatial Coverage

find,56.8097895,-5.079578;

Europeana

Europeana Data Provider

West Highlands Museum

Europeana Type

TEXT

Physical Object Item Type Metadata

Prim Media

288

Material

iron

Object Number

1178

Citation

Victorian, “Coffin guard,” West Highalnds Museum, accessed January 23, 2025, https://whm100.org/omeka/items/show/287.

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