Zaha Mohammad Hadid DBE RA (1950 – 2016)

Dame Zaha Mohammad Hadid DBE RA was an Iraqi-British architect. She was the first woman to receive the Pritzker Architecture Prize, in 2004. She received the UKs most prestigious architectural award, the Stirling Prize, in 2010 and 2011.

In 2012, she was made a Dame by Elizabeth II for services to architecture, and in 2015 she became the first and only woman to be awarded the Royal Gold Medal from the Royal Institute of British Architects. Buried at Brookwood Cemetery – New Muslim High Ground

Brookwood Cemetery receives national recognition

Brookwood Cemetery receives national recognition

One of the largest cemeteries in the country has received ‘Gold’ recognition for its high industry standards and good practice at the prestigious National Cemetery of the Year Awards

Brookwood Cemetery won the 2018 Gold award in the Large Cemetery category at the Institute of Cemetery and Crematorium Management Learning Convention and Exhibition at the Oxford Belfry Hotel, last week (Tuesday 2 October 2018)

Brookwood Cemetery is one of the most significant heritage assets in the Borough and it is considered by Historic England as a site of national significance, being a Grade 1 listed park and garden.

The Cemetery was opened in 1854 by the London Necropolis and National Mausoleum Company to house London’s dead. In the early 20th Century, part of the site was sold to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission to accommodate the graves of the Commonwealth victims of the First World War, as well as a separate area allocated to the American Battle Monuments Commission for American victims.

Philip Potts of the Memorial Awareness Board, who have been promoting and organising the Cemetery of the Year Awards for nearly 20 years, said: “The awards are an excellent opportunity to reward hard-working staff and demonstrate the central role cemeteries and church yards can play in the community. They provide places of peaceful contemplation and beauty, as well as their historical, social and ecological importance.

‘The team at Brookwood Cemetery performed exceptionally throughout the extensive judging period which is focused on industry standards, good practice and freedom of choice.”

Ian Tomes, Woking Borough Council’s Strategic Asset Manager, who oversees the cemetery, said: “This award is such a wonderful pat on the back for Avril Kirby and her team at Brookwood Cemetery. It acknowledges that they go above and beyond to try and provide a reliable, friendly and quality service.

“It is also recognition for the huge amount of work and investment that has gone into cemetery over than past four years, which is transforming the site and restoring it to its former glory.”

Cllr Ayesha Azad, Woking Borough Council’s Portfolio Holder for Asset Management, added: “I would like congratulate Avril and her team on their success at the National Cemetery of the Year Awards.

“We consider Brookwood Cemetery to be a vitally important part of our heritage and its future. Receiving this national award validates the work and investment we have made and continue to do so.

“We are committed to ensuring that the cemetery continues to be a unique and special location for those seeking a final resting place for their loved ones, as well as retaining its status as a site of national importance.'

Since acquiring Brookwood Cemetery in December 2014, the Council has implemented an extensive programme of restoration. Works have included removing vegetation that has returned previously overgrown areas of the cemetery to use, building a new mausoleum and creating a landscaped Garden of Remembrance and an additional 100 burial plots featuring carefully selected trees and shrubs, including a specimen Cedar of Lebanon, that reflects the historic nature of the Grade 1 listed cemetery. The cemetery lake has also been rebuilt and extensive improvements made to the office and public facilities. Currently works are ongoing to replace sections of the historic perimeter wall.

For more information about Brookwood Cemetery, and the services available, please call 01483 472222, email info@brookwoodcemetery.com or visit www.brookwoodcemetery.com

Zdenka Pokorna (1905-2007) [Czechoslovakian Plot]

Zdenka Pokorna (1905-2007) [Czechoslovakian Plot]

Zdenka Pokorna was a Czechoslovakian teacher and an unswerving patriot. She was hailed on her 90th birthday as the “living conscience of the century” by the Czechoslovakian Government.

She challenged the Habsburg, Nazi and Soviet occupations of her homeland and was forced into exile in 1948. She spent the rest of her long life in Britain from where she continued her campaigning.

Her obituary from The Times may be read here.

The ashes of Zdenka Pokorna were buried in the Czechoslovakian “annexe” of Brookwood Cemetery on Sunday 28 October 2007.

William Frend De Morgan (1839-1917) & Evelyn De Morgan (1855-1919)

DESCRIPTION: the memorial comprises a tall neo-Grec stele. Over a rectangular base with inscription is a relief, designed by Evelyn de Morgan, showing an angel with outstretched arms, pleading with a female figure of Death, with inverted torch, who turns her back. Above is an eared pediment, within which is a pair of hearts. The inscription described William as 'Artist - Potter - Inventor - Novelist' and closes 'Sorrow is only of the earth / The life of the spirit is joy'.

HISTORY: William is celebrated as a Chelsea-based potter who resurrected the art of lusterware and was much influenced by Middle eastern design; he later worked with William Morris and had a factory in Fulham. His wife was a figural painter, strongly influenced (like Burne-Jones) by the C15 Florentine painters: this influence is also sensed in this memorial, which is a late example of such 'Pe-Raphaelite twilight' works. One of a number of memorials at Brookwood to prominent artists of their day. The attribution of the monument to Sir George Frampton is perhaps open to question.

 

Robert Knox (1791-1862) [Plot 100]


Image Dr Brian ParsonsDr Knox was an anatomist and ethnologist. He is one of several famous people buried at Brookwood who have an entry in the Dictionary of National Biography.Knox was a distinguished anatomical lecturer, and was lecturer in Anatomy at the University of Edinburgh between 1825-41. Knox was also a leading teacher at Barclay's School of Anatomy which attracted record levels of students. He was an enthusiast of practical dissection and the anatomy schools required a steady supply of "subjects" for these classes to attract students. 

 

In 1827-28 William Burke and William Hare began to supply Dr Knox with suitable "subjects" for his classes. When their crimes were discovered during 1828, Knox was implicated, but was not asked to give evidence. Hare turned King's evidence and Burke was subsequently hanged and dissected. Knox was popularly considered just as guilty. Riots to place near to his house and he found it increasingly difficult to find work in Edinburgh.

Knox moved to London in 1842 and was appointed pathological anatomist at the Royal Marsden Cancer Hospital at Brompton.

The death mask of William Burke, who was executed in Edinburgh on 28 January 1829, is shown in the image above. William Hare's life mask is on the right. Photograph: Paul Kelbie/Observer

Dr Knox was buried in plot 100. The original memorial was a flat ledger stone which may or may not have included an inscription.The small granite block on top of this ledger stone was placed there in 1966 by the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh.

The following links give further information about Dr Knox:

Essay on the life of "Robert Knox, Anatomist, Scientist and Martyr" by Andrew Currie from the Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine (1932), 26(1), 39-46
Wikipedia entry for D

Search the Brookwood Cemetery Website

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages