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Thread: Swedish Funeral Candy

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    Default Swedish Funeral Candy

    Swedish Funeral Candy

    Source: https://nourishingdeath.wordpress.co...funeral-candy/



    During the mid-nineteenth century in Sweden hard sugar candies, typically in the form of a corpse and wrapped in black crepe paper with fringes became a popular funeral favor.

    Offered to funeral attendees with wine prior to the service, these little candy corpses wrapped up in a black shroud soon became a Swedish custom.

    According to Mats Bigert, “The wrapper was fringed, and the length and width of the fringes suggested the age of the deceased; long and thin would indicate the death of an old person.” Shorter, wider fringe would then be indicative of a child or younger individual.

    The wrappers would sometimes be adorned with ornately patterned silver paper, pictures of cherubs, or the more somber choice of a silhouetted crucifix or graveside setting.





    Verses, prayers and poems attached to the candies were also commonplace. They ran the gamut from such grim treasures as:

    The dark, quiet abyss;
    All our days will end like this.


    To an odd, moralistic pep rally:

    Death shall one day all us fetter.
    Pray, repent, act and make better.
    Consider, human, what you do.
    You never know when life is through.




    World War I and imposed sugar rationing proved to be the death knell for these funereal favors. Interestingly, I have found a few references to people now using the surviving candies as ornaments on Christmas trees, which I find strangely fitting.

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    I have found a few references to people now using the surviving candies as ornaments on Christmas trees, which I find strangely fitting.
    How is that fitting?

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