Relic Hunter: Irish Crown Affair (2000)
Season 1, Episode 11
9/10
A fairly powerful and well written plot
30 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I found the Irish Crown Affair to be an emotionally raw and powerful episode which was very well written, and almost unforgettable. It had everything: loyalty to a long dead king, betrayal, greed, and family honour and shame. Basically the O'Donnell clan of Ireland were charged with the safekeeping of the bejewelled crown of king Brian Boru, Ireland's last legitimate king who was slain in battle after defeating foreign (English I think) invaders in his homeland in 1000 AD.

The O'Donnells keep their vow to this great king when suddenly out of the blue--centuries later--in the medieval period they built a statue to king Henry II of England (Richard the Lionheart's own father) and symbolically pay allegiance/bow to him. No one knows that they hid Boru's crown in the statue's head! When Ireland finally gains independence from Britain in 1922/1923, the O'Donnells of the 20th century were permitted to keep their landed estates but they were basically denounced as traitors by their fellow Irishmen. And the modern O'Donnell clan have forgotten where their ancestors hid the crown. They only feel decades of painful disgrace and shame for their ancestor's alleged act of allegiance to the English.

This is where a friend of Sydney's (Molly) comes into the picture. Molly tells Sydney that she has come into possession of a medieval era poem which cryptically tells of the location of the missing crown of Ireland's last great king. Amazingly, the crown has been resting hidden away in plain sight for generations. (you know where) The O'Donnell clan in the medieval period probably hid it to keep themselves safe since everyone through the centuries would have threatened them for it. In the end, the crown is recovered but not before one of the 'friends' in Molly's party (and his 2 unscrupulous allies) reveals himself to be a ruthless treasure hunter who has plans to sell the crown for its immeasurable historical value. Sydney and the a surviving son of the O'Donnell clan (Garrett O'Donnell) who have become allies in order to find the crown manage to foil their plans in a brilliantly choreographed hand to hand fight in an Irish museum. The most touching scenes occur when Garrett O'Donnell decides to 'spruce' up the family's old symbols of heraldry and engages in a heart to heart talk with his father after saving both Brian Boru's crown (again as his ancestor has done) and securing the O'Donnells family honour by showing to all of Ireland that their ancestors were merely bowing to Brian Boru and not to the English king Henry II, whose statued head hid the well hidden Irish crown. It was a very emotional but frank father-son discussion.

This was a truly powerful and gripping story. And yet, I can only award it a rating of 9 out of 10. (I would give it 9.5 out of 10 if IMDb permitted this but it doesn't) The costume designer should have been fired for having king Brian Boru wear a uniform bearing 3 lions at the exciting start of the episode. Didn't he/she realize that this was the traditional symbol for England, not Ireland? This was a major memory lapse on the producers part. Every Irish and Englishmen would have a chuckle at this error today.
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