Richard III dig: Leicester
Cathedral burial confirmed
From The BBC
29 October 2012
The government has confirmed a skeleton that could be that
of Richard III will be interred in Leicester
if it is confirmed as the 15th Century king. The bones were found in September
by archaeologists digging beneath a car park in Leicester .
Leicester, Nottinghamshire and York MPs discussed a
permanent grave on Friday. In a written answer, justice minister Helen Grant
said the skeleton would be interred at Leicester Cathedral if tests proved it
was Richard III. In response to a question posed by Dan Jarvis, Labour MP for Barnsley , Ms Grant wrote: "My Department issued a
licence to exhume human remains which could be those of Richard III. Remains
have now been exhumed and archaeologists are currently carrying out tests to
determine the identity of the remains. Should they be found to be those of
Richard III, the current plan is for them to be reinterred in Leicester
Cathedral."
DNA results on the bones are being compared to that of
living descendants of Richard's eldest sister, Anne of York. Richard died at
the hands of forces of Henry Tudor near Market Bosworth, Leicestershire. His
grave, in the church of Greyfriars in Leicester ,
was lost during centuries of redevelopment. However, the archaeologists from Leicester University have found a skeleton, which
is consistent with the known details of his appearance and death. A university
spokesperson said the evidence included signs of a peri-mortem (near-death)
trauma to the skull and a barbed iron arrow head in the area of the spine.
Richard is recorded by some sources as having been pulled from his horse and
killed with a blow to the head. The skeleton also showed severe scoliosis - a
curvature of the spine - which may have led Shakespeare to portray him as a
"hunchback" king. Campaigners from both York and Leicester have said
the remains, should they prove to be the king, ought to come to them. In the
debate, Labour MP John Mann, from Bassetlaw in Nottinghamshire offered Worksop
as a halfway point between the two.
Labour's Jon Ashworth, who represents Leicester South, said
in response to Ms Grant's written answer: "This is terrific news and a
victory for the campaign. I always strongly argued that Leicester Cathedral was
the most suitable final resting place for the remains of Richard III. Finger
crossed it actually is him now!" Joe Ann Ricca, founder and chief
executive of The Richard III Foundation, which had argued the skeleton should
be interred in York ,
said she was disappointed at the decision. "If his remains are really going to be buried in Leicester , we would hope he at least has a traditional Christian service," she said.
"But it's kind of a monstrous act when you know that the former king of England
had expressed the desire and a wish to be buried at York Minster."
[How interesting…. The fact that Richard III’s body was lost
and now might have been found buried under a car park! This is doubly
interesting in that I’ve just finished a book on The Wars of the Roses which
ended with Richard’s death at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485. I’ll keep an eye
on the news to see if it’s actually his body.]
2 comments:
Cool. I actually read about the search, I hope they have found him. How exciting. It's amazing what we can discover all these years later. Now for Americans, if we could find Jimmy Hoffa and who the shooters were on the grassy knoll that would be awesome. What are the great mysteries that the Enlish would like solved?
v v asked: What are the great mysteries that the English would like solved?
Hard to say - we have so many [grin]
Probably the question a lot of people would be interested is the existence and identity of King Arthur. That'd be quite cool to know.
My favourite is about The Mary Celeste. That's fascinated me since childhood. I'd love to know what actually happen on that ship!
Post a Comment