Burial places of monarchs of Brunant

This list record the burial places of the monarchs of Brunant.

Initialy, the monarchs of Brunant were buried in the Grijzestad Cathedral in Grijzestad, but Adrian I was buried in Koningstad on a field that would later become the National Cemetery in Grafstad. Maria Amalia of Brunant, the "queen of six days", was detained by Karl Van Draak in 1663 in Bitburg Castle near Swantown. She was buried in 1703 at the castle, but her body was removed in 1907 to the Grijzestad Cathedral, the burial place of her ancestors. Karl Van Draak himself was also buried in Grijzestad Cathedral, but he was reburied in 1800 in the Royal Mausoleum in the gardens of the Realpaleis in Koningstad. His son Marten I was also buried in Grijzestad Cathedral, but never reburied in the Royal Mausoleum. Pieter I moved to Sicily, Italy in 1784 when he was forced to abdicate. He lived in Noto and was buried in the Noto Cathedral. He is the only Brunanter monarch who is currently buried outside Brunant. Adrian II was also deposed in 1800 and when he died in 1807, he was buried in the chapel of the Grijzestad Palace in Grijzestad. Ambroos I died in 1823 and was buried in Koningstad at the National Cemetery, but his body was moved to the Royal Mausoleum of Karl Van Draak in 1851. Since then, all monarchs are buried in the Royal Mausoleum. Only Johan I, who fled to Lovia was buried in the hamlet of Freetown until he was moved to the mausoleum in 1948. Marten II wished to be buried at the National Cemtery in Koningstad and he interrupted the tradition of being buried at the Royal Mausoleum.