mort house
See also: mort-house and morthouse
English
Noun
mort house (plural mort houses)
- Alternative form of morthouse.
- 1991, Ross Leckie, “Udny Mort House, Udny Green, Gordon”, in Grampian: A Country in Miniature, Edinburgh: Canongate, →ISBN, chapter 3 (Churches, Clerics and Catechism), page 65:
- The corpses were kept safe in mort houses, such as Udny’s, built in 1832 by Alexander Wallace and Thomas Smith. Those who had subscribed to the cost had free use of the mort house for themselves and their descendants; non-subscribers had to pay a fee. Characteristic of such mort houses as that in Mortlach kirkyard (NJ 323 392), Udny is a formidable building, without windows and strongly doored – once by the outside door of oak and again by an inner sliding iron door.
- 2015, Clifford A[lan] Pickover, “1832: Resurrectionists: William Harvey (1578–1657), William Burke (1792–1829)”, in Death and the Afterlife: A Chronological Journey from Cremation to Quantum Resurrection, New York, N.Y.: Sterling, →ISBN, page 113:
- As a result, coffin collars, mortsafes, and mort houses were employed in Scotland to prevent grave robbing.
- 2015, Malcolm Archibald, “Bodysnatchers”, in Liverpool: Gangs, Vice and Packet Rats: 19th-Century Crime and Punishment, Edinburgh: Black & White Publishing, →ISBN, chapter 2 (The Early Years), page 17:
- Graves were dug deeper than the customary six feet and layered with branches to hamper the urgent spades of resurrection men, mort stones, or huge stone slabs, were placed on top of new graves until the contents were too decomposed to be worth unearthing, locked mort houses, or dead houses, were used to store the newly dead and, most effective of all, volunteer guards were placed at graveyards, hunting the hunters.