In a rare combination of competence, an architectural historian (Niels
Gutschow) and an indologist (Axel Michaels) have documented death
rituals of the ethnic community of Newars in the Kathmandu Valley,
Nepal. The first part of the book focusses to a specific setting, the
ancient city of Bhaktapur and its calendric rituals of death and
renewal. An introduction to the urban fabric with its cremation places,
routes of death processions, places of spirits and ancestor deities is
followed by a presentation of specialists involved in the death and
ancestor rituals - illustrated by 28 maps. The second part presents a
detailed description of the union of the deceased with his forefathers,
a ritual which is also documented on a DVD. In addition, local handbooks
and manuals used by the Brahmin priest during this ritual are edited and
translated. This ethno-indological method of combination of textual and
contextual approaches aims at understanding both the agency in rituals
and the function of the text in contexts. Formalized rituals turn out to
be by no means strict, stereotypical and unchangeable. The uniqueness of
the actors, places and time has prompted the authors to name places and
actors and to date time. The study of death rituals represents the first
part of a trilogy of studies of life-cycle rituals in Nepal, carried out
under the auspices of the Collaborative Research Centre Dynamics of
Ritual (Sonderforschungsbereich 619: Ritualdynamik).