lich-wake
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Noun
[edit]lich-wake (plural lich-wakes)
- (obsolete, Scotland) The wake, or watching, held over a corpse before burial.
- 1871, Walter Field, Stones of the temple, or, Lessons from the fabric and furniture of the church[1]:
- In some parts of Scotland is still kept up the custon of Lyke-wake (Lich-wake), or watching beside the dead body before its burial.
- 1913, The Journal of State Medicine:
- Funeral rites in the house (lich wakes) should be avoided out of regard for the health of the members of the family.
- 2016, Arthur Morrison, The Shadows Around Us[2]:
- The custom of the "lich-wake," corresponding largely with the surviving Irish custom of waking the dead, had not then died out in Scotland, and in Monifieth was frequently practised.