The Phnom Penh Post

Explorer who put Australia on map set to be reburied

-

THE remains of the first British explorer to circumnavi­gate Australia are to be reburied in his home village after being discovered near a busy London railway station.

The grave of Captain Matthew Flinders, who popularise­d Australia’s name, was discovered in January in a built-over former burial g r o u n d b e h i n d Eu s t o n terminus.

The site was being excavated for the HS2 high-speed rail project, which will eventually link London with Birmingham and Manchester.

Flinders died aged 40 on July 19, 1814 – the day after the publicatio­n of A Voyage to Terra Australis, which described his 1802-1803 circumnavi­gation of Australia and proved that it was a continent.

With an estimated 40,000 remains at the former Saint James’s Church burial ground, archaeolog­ists were not sure they were going to find Flinders, whose resting place had been subject to much speculatio­n.

However, the ornate lead nameplate on his coffin was well-preser ved, enabling archaeolog­ists to identify the grave.

Flinders will be reburied in the parish church of Saint Mary and The Holy Rood in Donington, his home village i n Lincolnshi­re, easter n England.

Flinders’ relatives and the local community had asked for his remains to be reinterred where he grew up before joining the Royal Navy.

“It is fitting that the last voyage of Captain Matthew Flinders will be back to the village of Donington,” said Helen Wass, HS2’s head of heritage.

“This local boy from Donington put Australia on the map due to his tenacity and expertise as a navigator and explorer.

“The Flinders name is synonymous with exploratio­n, science and discovery, and HS2, through its archaeolog­y programme, will ensure that we maximise the opportunit­ies for further academic and scientific study,” she said.

Archaeolog­ists have studied his skeleton.

The Euston excavation was one of Britain’s largest-ever digs, going down as deep as eight metres, with the site protected from the elements under an 11,000sqm roof.

Flinders is a hero for many Australian­s of European origin, with stations, streets, squares and towns across the country named after him.

His remains will be transferre­d to the Diocese of Lincoln for safekeepin­g until the burial arrangemen­ts are made.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia