An Cosantóir

July 2011

An Cosantóir the official magazine of the Irish Defence Forces and Reserve Defence Forces.

Issue link: https://digital.jmpublishing.ie/i/35286

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history | 29 W ay back in 1935 the government acquiesced to a request from the Dublin Brigade Veterans Association that a remembrance memorial should be constructed in Dublin City. Part of the Rotunda Gardens in Parnell Square was chosen as a site due to its historical significance - The Irish Volunteer movement was founded in the nearby Rotunda in 1913 and it was within these gardens that many of those taken prisoner after the 1916 Rising were kept overnight before being moved to Richmond Barracks and Kilmainham Gaol. Although Daithí P Hanlon designed the garden in 1946, its construction only commenced in 1961. It is cruciform in shape and has a curving twelve-foot high, marble wall enclosing it from the rear. Access to the central pedestrian area is via a descending flight of steps that lead to a tranquil pool. The bed of the pool is decorated in a mosaic pattern of blue-green waves interspersed with weapons from Ireland’s Heroic Age. The weapons are depicted as broken because according to Celtic custom weapons were broken and cast in to the river at the end of a battle. As well as signifying the end of hostilities, many believe this was a votive offering to the gods for victory. The railings surrounding the lawns are decorated with cast designs of the Loughnashade Trumpet and the Ballinderry Sword, all of which are pointing downwards to indicate peace. The centrepiece by Oisín Kelly is an eight-ton, 25-foot high, bronze sculpture of the Children of Lir. It was cast at the Marinelli foundry in Florence, Italy and was inspired by Irish poet, WB Yeats’ poem 1916. The concept was that at certain points in history people are transformed and the artist used the depiction of human figures transforming into swans, symbolising rebirth, victory and resurrection, as in the mythological tale of the Children of Lir. Inscribed on wall adjacent to the sculpture is a poem entitled We saw a Vision by poet Liam MacUistin. It reads: In the darkness we saw a vision. We lit the light of hope and it was not extinguished. In the desert of discouragement we saw a vision. We planted the tree of valour and it blossomed In the winter of bondage we saw a vision. We melted the snow of lethargy and the river of resurrection flowed from it. We sent our vision aswim like a swan on the river. The vision became a reality. Winter became summer. Bondage became freedom and this we left to you as your inheritance. O generations of freedom remember us, the generations of the vision. The Garden of Remembrance was officially opened on Easter Monday 1966, the golden jubilee of the 1916 Rising by President and 1916 veteran, Mr Eamon De Valera. The Office of Public Works are responsible for maintaining the garden and for more on it, you can checkout heritageireland.ie. In the next issue, I will look at the National War Memorial, Islandbridge, Dublin 8. Paul O’Brien is an Irish historian and author. He has published two books: Blood on the Streets, 1916 and the battle for Mount Street Bridge and Uncommon Valour, 1916 and the battle for South Dublin Union. Paul also holds an MA in History and you can contact him at paulobrienauthor.ie THE DEFENCE FORCES MAGAZINE

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