An obituary
is an attempt to give an account of the texture and significance of the life of someone who has recently died. It is to be distinguished from a death notice (also known as a funeral notice), which is a paid advertisement written by family members and placed in the newspaper either by the family or the funeral home. [1]
Many news organisations have on file pre-written obituaries for notable individuals who are still alive; allowing detailed, authoritative—and lengthy—obituaries to appear very quickly after these people die.
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Obituary Tickets 4/18 | Apr 18, 2025 Fri, 6:00 PM | | Obituary Tickets 4/19 | Apr 19, 2025 Sat, 6:00 PM | | Obituary Tickets 4/24 | Apr 24, 2025 Thu, 6:00 PM | | Obituary Tickets 4/25 | Apr 25, 2025 Fri, 6:00 PM | | Obituary Tickets 4/26 | Apr 26, 2025 Sat, 6:00 PM | |
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History
The first obituary is very difficult to trace, however many candidates are found at the advent and popularization of the
printing press circa 1500s. The first obituaries were concise, simply containing the deceased name, birth date, death date, and cause of death.
During the late 1800s
John Thadeus Delane, an
English editor of the London newspaper
The Times
, saw the potential for obituaries and began promoting publishing them. This entailed newspapers recognizing a person's death as a solemn and important event that needed more than just a terse announcement. As a result, obituaries grew in length and elaboration, containing short prayers, poems, and brief biographies.
At the onset of the 1900s modern advances in printing technology allowed obituaries to contain images; this allowed obituaries to become more elegant, but more solemn as well. As the late 1900s and early 2000s saw the internet become more popular and ubiquitous, obituaries became digitized and available as a search result in addition to newspapers.
[2]
Premature obituaries
By definition, obituaries should always be
posthumous. But occasionally obituaries are published, either accidentally or intentionally, while the person concerned is
still alive. Most are due to hoaxes, confusions between people with similar names, or the unexpected survival of someone who was close to death. Some others are published because of miscommunication between newspapers, family members and the
funeral home, often resulting in embarrassment for everyone involved.
Irish author
Brendan Behan said that there is no such thing as bad publicity except your own obituary. In this regard, some people will seek to have an unsuspecting newspaper editor publish a premature death notice or obituary as a malicious hoax, perhaps to gain revenge on the "deceased". To that end, nearly all newspapers now have policies requiring that death notices come from a reliable source (such as a
funeral home), though even this has not stopped some pranksters such as
Alan Abel.
Media
Obituaries are a notable feature of
The Economist
, which publishes one full-page obituary per week, reflecting on the subject's life and influence on world history. Past subjects have ranged from
Ray Charles to
Uday Hussein.
The
British Medical Journal
encourages doctors to write their own obituaries for publication after their death.
[clarification needed]
Pan Books publishes a series called
The Daily Telegraph Book of Obituaries
, which are
anthologies of obituaries under a common theme, such as military obituaries, sports obituaries, heroes and adventurers, entertainers, rogues, eccentric lives, etc.
See also
- Eulogy
- Funeral
- List of premature obituaries
- Lists of people by cause of death
- Recent deaths
References
- Talk to the Newsroom: Obituaries Editor Bill McDonald
- Tribute To The Deceased: The History of Obituary Writing