Funeral toll

Photograph of cemetery bell tower.
Bell tower at Forest Home Cemetery in Fifield, Wisconsin. The bell is tolled during funerals.
English-style full circle bell with clapper half-muffled. A leather muffle is put over one side only of the clapper ball. This gives a loud strike, then a muffled strike alternately. The bell is shown inverted in the "rest position". Half-muffles are usually used for funerals and occasions of remembrance or mourning, as seen at the Funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales.

The Funeral tolling of a bell is the technique of sounding a single bell very slowly, with a significant gap between strikes. It is used to mark the death of a person at the funeral or burial service.

The expression "tolling" is derived from the English tradition of "telling" of the death by signalling with a bell. The term tolling may also be used to signify a single bell being rung slowly, and possibly half-muffled at a commemoration event many years later.

Origins

Three bells would be rung around the time of a death. The first was the "Passing bell" to warn of impending death, followed by the Death knell which was the ringing of a bell immediately after the death, and the last was the "Lych bell", or "Corpse bell" which was rung at the funeral as the procession approached the church.[1] This latter is closest to what is known today as the Funeral toll.

Today, customs vary regarding when and for how long the bell tolls at a funeral.

In churches with full-circle English bells, for commemorative services such as funerals, memorial services and Remembrance Sunday, the bells are rung half-muffled instead with a leather pad on one side of the clapper in call changes or method ringing. Very rarely are they rung fully-muffled with pads both sides. This can often be a Quarter peal or Peal – the latter lasting three hours.

See also

References

  1. Walters P 154-160
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