THE ROBERT EMMET ASSOCIATION
30-09-2003
Delay in Reinterral of Fear Píce Gan Ainm.
The Robert Emmet Association regrets that they must postpone the reinterral of Fear Pice Gan Ainm until further notice. Due to take place on Sunday 5 October, almost everything had been put in place for the reinterral but all is now on hold due to delays in finding the remains in the spot pinpointed by tradition. However work in searching the site continues as it is possible to miss the remains by a matter of feet or indeed inches. A new date for the reinterrral will be announced as soon as we are in a position to do so.
Fear Píce Gan Ainm will be taken from an unmarked grave in Co. Meath to rest in a place of honour on Oulart Hill in County Wexford. There he will represent some thirty to fifty thousand who lie in unmarked graves across Ireland from the 1798 period. He may have hailed from any county and may have been of any religion. We will never know. The religious service planned for his reinterral will reflect this and is expected to be a unique moment of reconciliation for many where the history of 1798 is concerned. The reinterral will is the final item on the agenda of Emmet 200 and will bring closure to the official commemorations of the Revolutionary Period 1791-1803 generally.
The Association wishes to thank all the people and bodies involved and to ask their forbearance through this period. Particularly they wish to thank The Department of the Taoiseach, The Department of Environment, The Department of Defence, The Lord Mayor of Dublin, An Garda Síochána, Dúchas, Meath County Council, Wexford County Council, The North Eastern Health Board, the various church authorities and the many pikegroups and other volunteers who have brought the project thus far.The postponement will be for as short a period as possible.
Comments (2 of 2)
Jump To Comment: 1 2just one thing, you write that you the association want to thank all people and bodies involved and to ask them for their forbearance through this period. (followed by a list of bodies...gardaí/lord mayor/ county council etc.,
Well written.
But you left one body out of the list, that of the poor dead man/woman Known as "Fear Píce Gan Ainm" who we must remember has shown 200 years of Forebearance and probably won't mind waiting a bit more, sure he/she might even be happy waiting there in his/her dead body till the epitaph is written.
----have the pathologists confirmed it's a man?
----that would be very embarassing wouldn't it, if some anarko-archaeologist discovered you wrongly sexed your body further down the line....
%-)
If there is any need for somber music, I offer my services as organist, though I suppose you'll be having pipers and stuff.
There is no reason why it could not be a woman. Women fought as combatants on the rebel side in 1798. But the legends handed down in the family who found the body say that it was male.
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