Heart-burial

In medieval Europe heart-burial was fairly common among the higher echelons of society, as was the parallel practice of the separate burial of entrails or wider viscera: examples can be traced back to the beginning of the twelfth century.

[1] Evisceration was carried out as part of normal embalming practices, and, where a person had died too far from home to make full body transport practical without infection, it was often more convenient for the heart or entrails to be carried home as token representations of the deceased.

[2] The motivation subsequently became the opportunity to bury and memorialise an individual in more than one location.

Notable medieval examples include: More modern examples include: In the 1994 movie Legends of the Fall, the character Samuel (Henry Thomas) is killed while serving in the Canadian Army in World War I.

His brother (Brad Pitt) cuts the heart out of the body and sends it home to be buried on his father's ranch in Montana.

Modern marker for the site of the burial of the heart of Robert the Bruce at Melrose Abbey
Burial site of Thomas Hardy 's heart