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File image of Cardinal Kevin Farrell, with a picture of Pope Francis in the background. Alamy Stock Photo

When is Pope Francis's funeral likely to take place and what role will an Irish cardinal play?

An Irish-born Cardinal played a significant role in announcing Francis’s passing to the world.

LAST UPDATE | 16 hrs ago

POPE FRANCIS’S DEATH has made headlines around the world today. The 88-year-old leader of the Catholic Church died following a period of illness.

His burial will take place between the fourth and sixth day after his death, which means Francis’s funeral will take place between Friday 25 April and Sunday 27 April.

The mayor of Rome Roberto Gualtieri has said it is his understanding that the funeral will take place on Saturday.

Francis was discharged from hospital recently and rallied in the last few weeks, but passed away this morning.

Francis was admitted to the hospital with bronchitis on 14 February after suffering breathing difficulties, but the Vatican later revealed he had developed pneumonia in both of his lungs. 

He spent five weeks in hospital before being discharged to convalesce. In recent weeks, Francis was spotted around Rome attending various religious events. 

In the moments after Pope Francis’ passing, an Irish-born Cardinal played a significant role in announcing his death to the world.

Cardinal Kevin Farrell, born in Dublin in 1947, has been the Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church since 2019.

The Camerlengo administers the property and revenues of the Holy See, which is the governing body of the Catholic Church and Vatican City State.

But the Camerlengo is also responsible for officially confirming the pope’s death and announcing it to the waiting world.

He announced the news at 9.45am this morning.

“Dearest brothers and sisters, it is with deep sorrow that I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis,” said Cardinal Farrell.

“This morning at 7:35 am (06:35 Irish time) the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the home of the Father.

“His entire life was dedicated to the service of the Lord and His church.”

Cardinal Farrell will also manage the administration of the Vatican until the election of a new pope, though no major decisions will be made in this period.

In what is a largely ceremonial practice, the Camerlengo visits the deceased pope and calls out his baptismal name three times – in the case of Francis, this was Jorge Mario Bergoglio.

After the pope is declared dead, the Camerlengo takes the pope’s Fisherman’s Ring and defaces it — Francis only wore his for special occasions, preferring to wear the one he had as Archbishop of Buenos Aires, in Argentina.

The Fisherman’s Ring is presented to the pope at his papal inauguration and refers back to St Peter, the first pope, who was a fisherman.

In centuries past, destroying the ring would have served a practical purpose and prevented the signet ring from being fraudulently used on papal documents.

Nowadays, it is mostly a symbolic act that signifies the end of the pope’s reign – the Vatican is one of the few absolute monarchies that remain.

pope-benedict-xvi-wears-the-fisherman-ring-as-he-holds-up-a-gospel-during-his-installation-mass-in-st-peters-square-at-the-vatican-sunday-april-24-2005-the-papal-fisherman-ring-was-traditionally Image of Pope Benedict XVI wearing the Fisherman's Ring during Mass in St. Peter's Square, 24 April, 2005. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

It is also the role of the Camerlengo to place seals on the pope’s study and bedroom, and later the entire papal apartment.

The areas will be opened again and the seal broken after the conclave is completed and a new pope is elected.

While this once served the practical purpose of preventing the pope’s apartment from being looted, it is now a symbolic act to signal the end of his time in office.

Meanwhile, many reputable outlets, including the BBC and the Britannica Encyclopaedia, wrongly claim that in addition to reciting the baptismal name of the pope three times, the Camerlengo also gently taps his head with a ceremonial silver hammer while doing so.

This claim was first reported online in The Guardian in 2003 and was later retracted a few weeks later, with The Guardian noting that the Vatican labelled it a “myth”.

A 2005 article from the Catholic News Agency claims that the Apostolic Constitution Apostólica Universi Dominici Gregis issued by Pope John Paul II in 1996 confirms this practice. However, there is no such reference to this to be found in the aforementioned document.

Cardinal Farrell will oversee the rite of the ascertainment of the death of Francis, which will take place this evening at 8pm Rome time.

The placement of the Francis’s body in his coffin will take place afterwards.

His remains will be placed in the Chapel of the Vatican’s Casa Santa Marta, before being moved to St Peter’s Basilica on Wednesday.

Cardinal Farrell is now tasked with making arrangements for the pope’s burial, though Francis has left behind a detailed wish of how he wants his funeral to be.

The pope’s funeral

Nine days of official mourning have been declared following Francis’s death and the burial will take place between the fourth and sixth day after his death.

Popes are usually buried in St. Peter’s Basilica, where the body will be laid in State for people to pay their respects.

Francis’s remains will be removed to St. Peter’s Basilica on Wednesday.

However, Francis had asked that things be done differently for him.

basilica-di-santa-maria-maggiore-piazza-del-esquilino-rome-italy The Santa Maria Maggiore, where Pope Francis will be buried. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

In his recently published memoir, Hope, Francis said that he will not be buried in St Peter’s Basilica, writing: “The Vatican is the home of my last service, not my eternal home.”

Instead, Francis will be buried at the Santa Maria Maggiore, one of four papal basilicas in Rome and the largest Marian church in Rome.

The last pope to be buried outside the Vatican was Leo XIII, who died in 1903.

Francis also described the funeral service planned for him as “excessive” and “arranged with the master of ceremonies to lighten it”.

While deceased popes are typically displayed on a raised platform known as a catafalque, Francis said this will not be that case for his ceremony and that he will lie in an open coffin.

juan-pablo-ii-karol-jozef-wojtyla-wadowice-1920-ciudad-de-el-vaticano-2005-papa-264-de-la-iglesia-catolica-1978-2005-primer-papa-no-italiano-desde-adriano-vi-en-1522-cuerpo-sin-vida-del-p Swiss Guards watch over Pope John Paul II on the catafalque in St Peter's Basilica. This will not be done for Francis. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

Meanwhile, popes are often buried in multiple coffins – one made out of cypress, one of lead and one of elm, which are placed one inside the other, before the papal body is interred.

However, there will be one coffin for Francis, made of wood and zinc.

funerals-of-john-paul-ii-prelates-prepare-to-weld-the-zinc-coffin-of-late-pope-john-paul-ii-prior-to-the-burial-in-the-grottos-beneath-st-peters-basilica-at-the-vatican-friday-april-8-2005-a Prelates prepare to weld the zinc coffin of Pope John Paul II prior to the burial beneath St. Peter's Basilica, 8 April, 2005. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

“No catafalque, no ceremony for the closure of the casket, nor the deposition of the cypress casket into a second of lead and a third of oak,” Francis said in his autobiography.

“With dignity, but like any Christian, because the bishop of Rome is a pastor and a disciple, not a powerful man of this world.” 

The placement of the Francis’s body in this coffin will take place this evening at 8pm Rome time.

Cardinal Farrell will preside over the rite in the Chapel of the Vatican’s Casa Santa Marta.

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19 Comments
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    Mute Dermot O Dwyer
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 7:54 AM

    122 distressed mortgage holders.
    Well thats everyone in my estate sorted, now onto the next estate…

    79
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    Mute Danny Southgate
    Favourite Danny Southgate
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 9:38 AM

    That’s the ground floor of my block only 5 more floors to go and 7 more blocks, at this rate it will be 2030 by the time it’s sorted

    24
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    Mute TheIrishBrain
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 10:02 AM

    Repossession is not a solution.

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    Mute Thomas Dooly
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 10:10 AM

    Some want it as a solution ,as in , get on with their life .

    13
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    Mute jim bowe
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 11:24 AM

    Well done to David Hall and everyone at IMHO for taking this initiative and trying to help people. Its a pity Enda and the rest of his pathetic government buried their heads in the sand about mortgage distress. None of them have any morals or allegiance to the Irish people.

    21
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    Mute DaveMac
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 2:14 PM

    Repossession is the only solution for those who are strategically not paying

    13
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    Mute Declan Byrne
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 7:58 AM

    I put a proposal to the bank sell house for 200k and I pay back the 30k as in negative equity over the rest of the lifetime of the mortgage.

    They said no lmao. What a bunch of pric*s. So my choice is to throw the keys at them and and tell them shove it.

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    Mute Crazy
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 8:03 AM

    They can’t legally stop you selling your home at the market price. Don’t let that one go. Get back onto them!

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    Mute OU812
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 9:04 AM

    The issue (as far as they see it) is that the €30k is unsecured & if you were to default, claim insolvency or go bankrupt, there’s nothing they can do to get it back.

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    Mute Nicky O'Donnell
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 9:40 AM

    This is 0.001 % of distressed mortgage holders.

    23
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    Mute Alan Scott
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 8:58 AM

    While the rest of us are paying through the nose for our mortgage with no help Aib are trying to entice people who owe them just to talk and probably won’t have to pay very little Owe Thousand to the bank and they come after you if you cannot pay but owe three hundred thousand. they will put out the red carpet to greet you

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    Mute Thomas Dooly
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 9:38 AM

    Alan , there’s no red carpet for mortgage holders in distress , they keep that one for people in debt to the tune of millions .

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    Mute Alan Scott
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 9:50 AM

    Thomas with respect we could be here posting for a week I have my views on this I know there are people out there who are doing their best not including them but there are lots more who are just sitting back .

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    Mute Thomas Dooly
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 10:04 AM

    Agree with the one about posting for a week , but there is also a lot more whom are trying their best than the ones than are not ..

    Maybe this scheme will work , who knows ..;)

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    Mute Danny Southgate
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 9:35 AM

    The reason this was set up was because some people actually stood up to the bank and told them where to go, don’t think for one minute this was set up for the benefit of the customer, this is a basket case of a bank with very poor record keeping and to date has cost the taxpayer over 20 billion which will be never be repaid , AIB in the 80s got into trouble buying an insurance company which at the time meant they had to be bailed out and that money was never paid back so I don’t see much hope for this money been returned, according to the report 22 people got a write down but if you read between the lines it is all voluntary surrender, this look likes to me that this group of 22 bought houses at the top of the market and will never have the money to repay, so the bank knowing they will never get paid allowed a voluntary surrender instead of paying legal fees, not exactly ground breaking stuff, still it is only 3 months old so let’s see if Mr hall comes up with something of benefit to the customers of AIB or is this a very sly way of the bank getting what they want by using a 3rd party and then when the shit hits the fan saying it’s nothing to do with us, only time will tell

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    Mute Thomas Dooly
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 9:36 AM

    Just a glorified debt collection agency

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    Mute Philip
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 9:51 AM

    This is only happening with aib because its over 95% controlled and owned by the state

    Its taxpayers money

    This would never happen with BOI or Ulster bank

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    Mute Alan Scott
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 9:05 AM

    A red thumb already maybe another satisfied customer who won’t have to pay.

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    Mute coolio
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 12:30 PM

    AIB are great at doing a restructuring deal

    Line right up on your go on the spinning wheel

    Bailed them all out with plenty of dosh

    One big problem , they kept the stash

    Conquer and divide is alive and well

    The ordinary punter can go to hell

    7
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    Mute Ogochukwu
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 12:43 PM

    What’s going down ,,lol Mr Hall dids people hand over their homes and pay €900 a month for next 6 years ..lol youse did great deal ,,but for who ..lol Nomore chasing ambulances ..lol chasing people in debt ..lol more money in that ..lol

    Tell Ogochukwu more about this please ..lol youse were on before ..we need to hear ..how much you making ..lol what are the margins in profits from €150,000 do you get 20% nice mon for some..lol

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    Mute Alan Scott
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 9:41 AM

    Thomas not a collection agency its a get out jail agency.

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    Mute Danny Southgate
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 10:04 AM

    Alan let’s put things into prospective here, worst case scenario all distressed mortgages in the state would come to around 10 billion, that’s the same total as the top 6 developers in Nama, who have kept everything plus got a salsify of 4 k per week walk around change, so why should Mary and Johnny give 2 FCUKs about AIb or any other bank who no matter what they do, no matter how much they blow and piss away can never fail, and when the do FCUK up get retirement packages in the millions and tax free hand shakes, remember the CEO saying I would sooner die than take state money, what happened??? Well that tosser is still alive and claiming 500k per year while studying history in trinity, o and yes they took over 20 billion, so let’s not start shouting at each other that’s what they want to distract from what they done, remember Duffy with the crap line of up to 30% strategic defaulters! the only defaulters in the room that day was him! that was crap to turn people against each other end of story,

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    Mute Thomas Dooly
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 10:09 AM

    Alan , there is over 100,000 people in work that are in mortgage arrears ,that is staggering ..

    15
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    Mute Alan Scott
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 10:44 AM

    Danny I respect your views concerning banks builders developers I and many more were hard pressed paying our mortgage down through the years I had tough times many years ago when our overtime hours were wiped out had to manage with no help from no one we got through it when every door was shut against us. What has happened now people went in over their heads with no thought given on the if word builders built nice houses with posh names nice entrances then on comes the victims with very little end up with a new house car and maybe two holidays with no planning for times changing

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    Mute Danny Southgate
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 11:50 AM

    Alan I know of a tradesman had his mortgage, business loan and truck lease with AIB, the truck cost him 54 k to be paid over 5 years, after paying over 34 k off the balance he fell behind with payments, he was behind €1500 when they sent people to reposes, he argued with them that he had payment protection with them to cover him for 12 months of payments, which they denied, they took his truck and sold it for 9 k even though it was worth over 25 k, this put this man out of work completely” he then fell behind with the mortgage and when asked why he could not pay he explained to the manager about his truck been taken back the manager did not want to know, that was 2010, since then that man has struggled to pay his way and one week before christmass 2013 AIB sent him a cheque for €500, with a letter saying here is a refund for the payment protection on the truck that we told you you never had, when he phoned up to see about this he was told by some condescending old cow that the bank were going trough a hard time back then, that AIB for you a bunch of lying thugs with no morals

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    Mute Nigel O Keeffe
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 12:38 PM

    Can your mate not take them to court?by refunding the premium would they have admitted breaking the terms and being partly at least ..responsible for his financial loss?

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    Mute Danny Southgate
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 1:43 PM

    Yea he has been to 3 or 4 solicitors who all want money up front, all of them said to write to the ombudsman, he thinks he now has a good solicitor on board so hopefully things will work out

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    Mute Eric Davies
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 2:16 PM

    danny I had something similar happen to me only with bank of Ireland, in 2008 I took out a small 5k business loan, they also talked me into having ppi , in 2010 I had a health problem and could not work, so I applied for the ppi to be paid. I was then told that I was not covered as I didn’t have a v.a.t certificate of payment, it was explained to the insurance company (a company who I have since found out is partly or wholly owned by b.o.i.) that as I was earning less than 20k per year turnover from the business I didn’t need to have a vat registration , the bank actually backed me up on my claim, but the insurance company declined , they then returned my ‘premiums’ to the bank (650 euro) and cancelled the policy. the bank’s business loans dept in dublin then called me in for default on my loan payments, I told them I had been waiting for the insurance to be sorted, they then denied that there was ever a policy in place. this led to them closing all my accounts and demanding repayment of loans and overdraft facility. I was contacted by 3 firms of solicitors each looking for ‘settlement ‘ I told them what had gone on and that ii was no longer in apposition to pay anything, we went to mab’s and they settled for 1.50 (1 euro and 50 cent) per month each , i’ll be long dead before I ever pay off even the legal fees, but its all there getting from me. if they had acted in an honest way in the beginning most of the loan money would now be paid back, but they wanted it both ways, not to pay out the insurance and to get me to pay back what was owing, banks and insurance are nothing but legalised robbers.

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    Mute Danny Southgate
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    Feb 3rd 2014, 2:26 PM

    Did you have any dealings with the ombudsman or is that a closed shop as well

    5
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