In some older cemeteries, you may come across graves covered by unusual iron structures. These are called mortsafes, and their purpose was far from decorative.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, newly buried bodies were at risk of being stolen. Medical schools needed cadavers for study, and so-called “resurrection men” would dig up fresh graves, sell the bodies, and disappear before morning. It created a grim underground trade in human remains.
To protect their loved ones, families used heavy iron cages placed over graves. As the article explains, “Those cages weren’t superstition; they were armor against scalpels and shovels.” They were a practical defense against grave robbing, not a symbolic or religious feature.
The graves would remain protected until the body had decomposed enough to no longer be of interest. At that point, the iron structure could be removed and reused for another burial. It was a grim but practical cycle driven by fear and necessity.
Seeing one today changes the way a cemetery feels. What might look like strange metalwork is actually evidence of a time when “even in death, people were hunted.” These structures turn burial grounds into reminders of how far people once had to go to protect the dead from being taken.