The Haddon Dixon Repatriation Project

In 2020, TCD announced plans to deal with its colonial legacy and we asked Provost Paddy Prendergast if he had heard of the stolen skulls held in TCD. The repatriation of these remains would, we proposed, be a good way to start decolonising the campus. He agreed but TCD changed its mind when the Anatomy Dept refused to repatriate the remains. A new round of negotiations with Provost Linda Doyle and her public engagement team on Sept 1, 2022.

A public history project in three parts. Part one deals with an attempt by communities to engage TCD in the repatriation of skulls stolen from three burial grounds in the west of Ireland in 1890. Part two responds to various arguments advanced by the skulls’ keepers in the”Old” Anatomy Dept in TCD and deals with the issues of provenance and folklore relating to the protection of burial grounds.

The Stolen Skulls of Inishbofin. Photo by Walsh (2016) of a collection of 24 stolen skulls in Trinity College Dublin / TCD. Haddon and Dixon stole thirteen crania (skulls without jaw bones) from monasteries in the west of Ireland in 1890, and gave the collection to Trinity College Dublin. The photo shows four of the skulls on two shelves in a display case in a display case, wrapped in plastic bags that carry a catalogue number. They are labelled ‘Inishbofin, Haddon & Dixon’ and St. Finian’s Bay. Kerry, Haddon & Dixon. Marie Coyne and Ciarán Walsh began campaigning for their return in 2012.

Part 1 : The case of the missing skulls from Inishbofin

“John Millington Synge poked fun at colonial science in The Playboy of the Western Worldwhen he referred to an anthropological collection in TCD. “Did you never hear tell” Jimmy asked Philly “of the skulls they have in the city of Dublin, ranged out like blue jugs in a cabin of Connaught?” In 2020, TCD announced plans to deal with its colonial legacy and I joined real-life descendants of Synge’s characters in asking Provost Paddy Prendergast if he had heard of the same skulls. The repatriation of these skulls would, we proposed, be a good way to start decolonising the campus.”

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Part 2: ‘Don’t kick that skull or the dead will come after you!’

“Covid restrictions have forced us all to think about traditions relating to death and dying. The case of the Inishbofin skulls at TCD has added a curious twist to that story. An investigation into the provenance of those skulls has uncovered a long-forgotten tradition of placing skulls in medieval ruins and an associated body of folklore that warned people against interfering with them. The message was simple: don’t kick that skull or the dead will come after you!”

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Part 3: And island funeral

TCD released the remains of thirteen individuals on 13 July 2023 and we carried them Inishbofin and buried them on 16 July.

Skills

Posted on

June 10, 2024