exhumation

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As exhumation (also exhumation or Enter ending ) is the unearthing of an already buried corpse from its grave referred.

Exhumation in criminal proceedings

The excavation of a buried corpse is permitted in criminal proceedings for the purpose of judicial examinations ( Section 87 (3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure (StPO)). According to Section 87, Paragraph 4, Clause 1 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, exhumations can be ordered by a judge or , in the case of imminent danger , by the responsible public prosecutor's office . If a relative of the deceased can be identified without difficulty and the purpose of the investigation is not endangered, he must be notified of the exhumation. If poisoning is suspected, a chemical expert should also be present (Section 34 RiStBV ). TheThe autopsy is not to be assigned to the doctor who treated the deceased in the illness immediately preceding the death. However, he can be asked to attend the opening of the body in order to provide information on the medical history.

Other reasons for exhumation

Exhumations can have different purposes. For example, they can be used to:

  • To clear a grave for the next use. The bones that are still found are often taken to an ossuary , sometimes they are burned.
  • To transfer the dead ,
    • for example because an old cemetery is found in a building project,
    • for example to bury them in a more dignified place. In June 1989 Imre Nagy's body was exhumed and solemnly buried. Religious aspects can also play a role here, for example when those who have been beatified in the Catholic Church are reburied in a place where the believers can worship them (e.g. Hildegard Burjan ).
  • To transfer the dead from mass graves to individual graves.
  • To research historical events (see also Truth Commission ) .

Often exhumations take place after wars, after dictatorships or after crimes against humanity . Examples:

geology

In geology , exhumation is the uplift or erosion of rocks from a depth to the surface of the earth.

See also

literature

  • Melanie Drees: On the criminological structure of exhumations. Using the example of an examination at the Forensic Medicine Institute of the University of Münster. Münster Univ., Diss., 1985.
  • Alfred Haugg: For accident assessment and anatomical diagnosis of organ diseases during exhumations. Munich, Med. F., Diss. 1952.
  • Kira Holzhausen: Giving the dead a name: How exhumations restore dignity to the war victims in Guatemala. Marburg 2007, ISBN 978-3-8288-9240-8 .
  • Franc Kernjak: Rescue the dead - find life. Exhumations in Guatemala. Historical processing and psychosocial work. Innsbruck, Vienna, Bozen 2006, ISBN 978-3-7065-4315-6 .
  • Jürgen Krahn: On the criminological structure of exhumations. Using the example of an examination at the Forensic Medicine Institute of the University of Erlangen. Münster Univ., Diss., 1985.
  • Burkhard Madea (Hrsg.): The medical investigation. Legal bases, practical implementation, problem solving . 3rd edition, Berlin 2006, ISBN 978-3-642-34642-2 .
  • Heiko Scherf: About the exhumations of the Leipzig Institute for Forensic Medicine in the period 1900-1996. Leipzig, Univ., Diss., 2000.
  • Kristin Ulm: 371 exhumations. An examination from a morphological, insurance-medical and forensic perspective. Giessen, Univ., Diss., 2008.

Web links

Wiktionary: Exhumation  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations

Individual evidence

  1. wdr.de
  2. spiegel.de: Salvador Allende committed suicide , July 20, 2011
  3. "Katyn" - just a Polish myth? (PDF; 264 kB)