Emotional shop staff waved a final goodbye to Primark's founder as his funeral procession passed the chain's first ever store.
Hailed as a retail giant, Arthur Ryan died earlier in the week aged 83 following a short illness.
He opened the shop 50 years ago in Dublin, where it traded as Penneys.
Staff formed a guard of honour by lining Jervis Street in central Dublin on Saturday as the hearse carrying Mr Ryan passed by.
They applauded in a poignant tribute.
Penneys had to change its name to Primark for European stores outside Ireland because JC Penney owned the copyright to the name.
Half a century after its foundation, Primark now has 370 stores across 12 countries, employing 75,000 people.
Mr Ryan was chief executive until 2009, stepping into the chairman's seat until his death, overseeing much of the expansion, including opening the first British Primark store in 1973.
The boss also helped cement Primark's name on the UK high street, buying 120 former Littlewoods branches in 2005.
The tribute to Mr Ryan outside the Penneys store came ahead of his funeral at the Church of the Scared Heart in Donnybrook in south Dublin.
George Weston, chief executive of Primark's parent company Associated British Foods, this week said Mr Ryan would be remembered as a "great giant of retailing".
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