Does anybody know when newspaper obituaries began, or even when they became more commonplace?
Niki
It depends on what you mean by obituaries. If you are in America, I gather from comments on various boards, that this equates to death / funeral notices.
these are almost invariably paid for notices, so would depend on how affluent the family was at the time.
However, an obituary is really a tribute to a person who has died, written by a friend or relative or, in the case of very prominent people, by a newspaper reporter. The latter are usually prepared in advance, when the celebrity is known to be either very ill or very old etc. You might have noticed that these sometimes appear in the papers the very next day after they die. But those written for other notable people - written by friends etc. - may appear weeks or months after the death.
Check with Wiki** for a more complete explanation.
So if your 1820 person was an important person, or even a local notable, you could easily find someone would have written an obit for him.
Dawn M