memorial.wiki

A place to remember.

The Memory Well

Some people leave a mark on the world so deep that forgetting them feels impossible. Memorial.wiki is a living space where those marks are preserved — not in stone, but in stories, in the small details that made someone irreplaceable.

Anyone can create a memorial page here. You don't need to be a writer or know the right words. You just need to remember someone and want the world to know they were here.

Think of it as a quiet corner of the internet — no algorithms, no feeds, no noise. Just names, and the stories that belong to them, kept safe for as long as the web endures.

Those Remembered

Eleanor Voss1942 – 2019
Marcus Chen1988 – 2023
Aisling O'Brien1956 – 2021
David Ramirez-Fontaine1971 – 2020
Yuki Tanaka1934 – 2018
Samuel Okafor1963 – 2022
Rosa Lindqvist1915 – 2017
James Whitfield1979 – 2024
Amira Hassan1948 – 2025

The Writing Desk

Creating a memorial begins with a name. Just a name. You can start there and come back — add stories when they surface, photographs of the mind, the small specificities that only you would remember.

There are no rules about what to write. Some people share a single sentence. Others fill pages. What matters is that the words are yours and the person they describe was real to you.

Like a pressed flower between pages, each memorial preserves something delicate. The way they laughed. The song they always hummed. The particular shade of their handwriting.

Memorial pages can be edited by anyone who knew them — a wiki in the truest sense. Friends, family, neighbors, the barista who knew their order. Every perspective adds a facet to the story.

Each page becomes a small, steady light in the dark — a candle that doesn't go out. As long as the web remembers, the names remain.

Every name matters.