Pretty amazing discovery if true!
(Source).
'...blows to the skull consistent with injuries received in battle.' Or a typical mugging in Leicester.
British archaeologists say a skeleton found under a city centre car park in central England could be that of the medieval king Richard III.
Researchers from the University of Leicester said they had found a male skeleton with similarities to historical descriptions of Richard, who ruled England between 1483 and his death in battle in 1485.
The remains, which are well preserved, are undergoing DNA analysis.
"What we have uncovered is truly remarkable," said Richard Taylor, the university's director of corporate affairs.
"This skeleton certainly has characteristics that warrant extensive further detailed examination," he told a press conference.
The team, which has been excavating a car park in the city of Leicester for three weeks, said the skeleton had an arrow-head embedded in its back and had received blows to the skull consistent with injuries received in battle.
...
Today, Richard III is best known as the hunchbacked villain of the eponymous play by William Shakespeare - and while the skeleton is not that of a hunchback, it does have a curved spine.
"This would have made his right shoulder appear visibly higher than the left shoulder," Mr Taylor said.
"This is consistent with contemporary accounts of Richard's appearance."
(Source).
'...blows to the skull consistent with injuries received in battle.' Or a typical mugging in Leicester.
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Love a bit of History!