Molenbeek-Saint-Jean Cemetery (French: Cimetière de Molenbeek-Saint-Jean; Dutch: Begraafplaats van Sint-Jans-Molenbeek) is a cemetery belonging to Molenbeek-Saint-Jean in Brussels, Belgium, where the municipality's inhabitants have the right to be buried. It is located at 539, Chaussée de Gand/Gentsesteenweg, in the west of the municipality.[2] The ensemble extends over 1.5 hectares (3.7 acres).[3]
The cemetery was inaugurated on 16 August 1864 to replace the old parish cemetery around the Church of St. John the Baptist, which had become too small, and whose last remains were cleared in 1932.[1][4] Nowadays, it concentrates a considerable protected heritage, including funeral galleries and a columbarium initially designed for Laeken Cemetery and built in 1880, as well as several chapels.[1]
Main sights
The cemetery contains fine examples of 19th-century funerary art. Examples include:[1]
the burial galleries and columbarium from 1880, spurred on by Émile Bockstael, after his earlier initiative at Laeken Cemetery
^Un deuil à Molenbeek, Le Quotidien, 20 October 1914
Bibliography
Celis, Marcel (2004). Cimetières et nécropoles. Bruxelles, ville d'Art et d'Histoire (in French). Vol. 38. Brussels: Éditions de la Région de Bruxelles-Capitale.
Vandervelde, Cecilia (1991). La nécropole de Bruxelles : Étude de l'architecture et de la sculpture funéraires, des symboles et des épitaphes. Inventaires (in French). Brussels: Commission d'Histoire de l'Europe.
Vandervelde, Cecilia (1997). Les champs de repos de la Région bruxelloise : Étude de l'architecture et de la sculpture funéraires, des symboles et des épitaphes. Inventaires (in French). Brussels: Self-published.