Hilary Mantel calls for repatriation of Irish ‘giant’ skeleton



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Author Hilary Mantel has asked the Royal College of Surgeons to repatriate the skeleton of an Irish “giant” whose bones remain on display in London two centuries after he asked to be buried at sea.

Byrne had a genetic form of gigantism that caused him to grow to over 2.31 meters (7 feet 7 inches) tall. His height made him a celebrity in 18th century London, and before his death in 1783 he did everything he could to ensure that his body was not dissected, a fate that was usually reserved for executed criminals. But despite her wishes and plans for a burial at sea, her remains were acquired by pioneering Scottish surgeon and anatomist John Hunter.

Byrne’s skeleton appeared in Hunter’s private collection four years later and remained on public display for much of the next two centuries in the Hunterian Museum, run by the Royal College of Surgeons.

In 2018, the Hunterian Museum said it would consider Byrne’s fate during renovations.

Mantel, the booker-winning author of Wolf Hall and writer of a fictional portrait of Byrne titled The Giant, O’Brien, said this week that it was “time for Charles to go home” and for his bones to be buried. In Ireland.

“I know that in real life he was a suffering soul, nothing to do with the fabulous storybook giant I created, and that his rewards were minor and his ending was very grim,” Mantel said.

“I think science has learned all it can from bones, and the most honorable thing now is to put it to rest. It would fit in with the spirit of the times and I see no reason to delay it. He has waited long enough. “

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