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    Human Remains Found in Search for King Richard III's Grave

    A hunt for the grave of King Richard III has turned up human remains at the medieval church where the English monarch is said to be buried — but there is no word yet on whether the remains belong to the king.

    University of Leicester archaeologists will announce the details of the new findings tomorrow (Sept. 12). Until then, the researchers are remaining tight-lipped about the find.

    "What we have uncovered is truly remarkable and today (Wednesday, Sept. 12) we will be announcing to the world that the search for King Richard III has taken a dramatic new turn," said Richard Taylor, the director of corporate affairs at the University of Leicester. [See images of the Richard III discoveries]

    Archaeologists began excavating the parking lot of the Leicester City Council on Aug. 25 in search of a medieval Franciscan friary known as Greyfriars. The location of the church had been lost, but historical records hold that Richard III, the last English king to die in battle, was laid to rest there in 1485.

    Now, researchers are confident that they have found the church, as well as a 17th-century garden that supposedly once held a memorial to the lost king.

    Among the relics uncovered in the dig are medieval window tracery, lead fragments from stained-glass windows, a medieval silver penny and a stone frieze, which may have lined the choir stalls. In addition, paving stones that were found mark the garden of Robert Herrick, a mayor of Leicester who built a mansion on the church site more than 100 years after King Richard III's death in the War of the Roses.

    Richard III ruled for only two years before his death during the Battle of Bosworth Field. Despite his short rule, he gained extra fame a century after his death, when William Shakespeare penned "Richard III," immortalizing the king in a play. Since his death, Richard III has been the focus of much interest. Over the years, his lost grave spurred fanciful rumors about where his body had gone, including that his bones were thrown into the Soar River and that his coffin was used as a horse-trough. These tales have been discredited, according to Philippa Langley, a member of the Richard III Society, which is collaborating on the excavations.

    The archaeologists have now excavated the choir of the church found under the city council parking lot, which is reportedly not far from where Richard III was laid to rest. If the king's body is found, archaeologists will subject it to DNA analysis and re-inter it in Leicester Cathedral.

    Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+

    Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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    88 comments

    • X  •  3 days ago
      How cool. I hope Yahoo keeps us posted.
    • patois  •  2 days 23 hrs ago
      Archeology is an awesome career. This find of human remains that may be King Richard III's must have been a major thrill for the folks on this project.
    • m  •  3 days ago
      Good archeological investigative work.
    • Ray  •  2 days 22 hrs ago
      It's good to be king...unless they kill you.
      • ivorytowerboy 2 days 6 hrs ago
        Learn to spell, moran!
    • GreyFoxx  •  2 days 23 hrs ago
      That would be an awesome find ! I have been researching my maternal ancestry,and was told that we had distant relatives who fought in the War of the Roses.Not sure yet,still connecting dots and filling in blanks,but it would be awesome to find King Richard III in the family tree.Have already connected to Sir Edmund Burke.
      It was called the War of the Roses because it is said that a red rose was used to symbolize the House of Lancaster and the white rose used for the House of York.Not sure which house my family belonged to but anxious to find out.
    • Gary  •  2 days 21 hrs ago
      If they're going to clone a woolly mammoth, then why not Richard III ?
      • Carol Perry 2 days 17 hrs ago
        If they look good i'll kiss any part their hearts desire
    • dan rathers drunk, again  •  2 days 20 hrs ago
      That bloody sheriff of Nottingham and Basil Rathbone done him in.
      • Caius 2 days 16 hrs ago
        Richard I Lion Hearted. His greed did him in, shot by an arrow while storming a castle in France to get at the treasure.
    • Steve  •  2 days 15 hrs ago
      How do you lose the gravesite of an English King? Why so little respect from the Brits for Richard III?
      • Mandy 2 days 11 hrs ago
        He killed the Princes in the tower!
    • Bob  •  2 days 19 hrs ago
      For all you 'bones in a grave... DUH' cynics, 550 years in the soil is a long time, and the soil in many parts of England are so acidic that bones can completely deteriorate in as little as 100 years. Finding a mostly complete skeleton in exposed soil (without the protection from weather of a church, cairn or burial crypt) IS a big deal. Remember, this was a garden, not Ely Cathedral or York Minster.
    • R  •  2 days 20 hrs ago
      In his most feverish nightmares, Richard could never have imagined that this is what would become of his mortal remains.
    • Daniel  •  3 days ago
      dna, i want dna...
    • Braennvin2  •  2 days 17 hrs ago
      So was he really a hunchback? Was he "rudely stamp'd", "deformed, unfinish'd" or was Shakespeare slandering him? They found the bones of his alleged victims - the Princes in the Tower. How exciting if they found him as well!
    • R.  •  2 days 19 hrs ago
      How do you get to build your mansion on/over a site that has a memorial to a king on it?
      • steveLL 2 days 13 hrs ago
        Times were different then. A mayor powers then was absolute - sort of like the king's. Today they would have to have neighborhood hearings, demolish building permits, building permits, do environmental impact statements, get re-zoning approvals to get it changed from religious to private residence, and of course before all of that have historical archaeologist come in a do a dig to search for historical artifacts. Things were a lot simpler then.
    • Hal  •  2 days 20 hrs ago
      A good article. Let's hope they follow up.
    • Paul  •  2 days 12 hrs ago
      This afternoon, The Bamster will issue a statement that this is exactly what he means about the rich not paying their fair share. This man hasn't paid taxes in nearly 600 years.
    • Otto Pilot  •  2 days 12 hrs ago
      The choir was buried too? Wow, tough church.
    • mouse trap  •  2 days 8 hrs ago
      For you Americans who look at Leilester and try to work out how this word is properly pronounced, let me help you out. Despite all of the letters in this word, it is pronounced like the proper name: Lester! Why the British put all of those letters into such a simpley proounced word has also given me a chuckel. LOL! Another one is the word: Woolrich,which they pronounce Wool'itch.
    • Centrist  •  2 days 20 hrs ago
      An archeological dig .... better than a parking lot.
      Read the autobiography of Benvenuto Cellini. It very effectively shows what life was like in 1500's - probably not much different from King Richard-III's day.
    • Dianeo  •  1 day 21 hrs ago
      I still like the story about the people who found an medivel well under the floor of their living room....but i do think that is a guy thing----
    • Michaela  •  2 days 11 hrs ago
      I for one cannot wait to hear if the bones belong to Richard III, imagine how awesome that would be! I wonder if the church will hold a funeral for him? That would be pretty cool.
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