Showing posts with label Richard III. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard III. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Richard III: King in the Car Park


For those of us that have no way of viewing the Channel 4 documentary
Richard II: The King in the Car Park I found it uploaded for "Research & Educational purposes"on youtube. I for one would like to be educated on the finding of Richard III and thought that others that have not stumbled across it may like to be educated on the subject matter as well.  Also there is going to be a follow up documentary made by the same people that produced Richard III: King of the Car Park. It is said to be called Richard III: The Unseen Story and will tell the tale of the archeological work that led to the identification of Richard III.

Here is the full program and I hope you enjoy it.



Thursday, February 7, 2013

Phillipa Langley BBC Radio Leicester Interview on Richard III

 The screenwriter, Phillipa Langley, who essentially launched the search for Richard III remain,s did an interview with BBC Radio Leicester. It was first put up on line by Richard Armitage Central with a snippet but I was able to hear the interview in it's entirety on King Richard Armitage site.  When the interview first started I thought that the inter viewer was our Richard because he too also has a baritone voice. Very lovely to listen too.


Tuesday, February 5, 2013

And the Winner is... Richard III




  News came out Monday morning, February 4 2012, that the skeleton found under the carpark in Leicester is in fact those of Richard III. After 6 months of waiting DNA test results came in late Sunday night with the news that, most of us pretty much expected, that Richard III had been found.


Richard III from the University of Leicester


  Looking at this photo gives me nothing but sympathy for King Richard III. Not only would have one shoulder been jacked-up to the sky because of scoliosis, but left untreated, and in his time that would have been the case, a hunchback, properly known as kyphosis. I imagine he must suffered terrible back pain plus difficulty in breathing because sever scoliosis can affect the lung capacity and the heart because in severe cases the ribcage would push hard against these organs and increasing the chances of pneumonia and heart failure. So with no treatment at that time in history  for his affliction his life span was already shortened. Also,the spinal curve also stunted his growth because he would have been around 5'8" but was considerably shorter.

  So because of this Richard III apparently lived life to is fullest, which did include him stealing the throne, but he wasn't the first to do so, and had his nephews, as children, declared illegitimate and thrown in the Tower of London where they died.Had former friends executed, but that is what happens when you lead an unsuccessful revolt against your king.

  Before the children's death, however, Richard was a popular ruler, but when the boys died on his watch the popularity tide started to turn towards Henry, Earl of Richmond, who would become Henry VII, head of the rival house, the House of Lancaster and the first monarch of the House of Tudor. So in order to seize upon the momentum of popularity Henry Tudor landed in his birthplace of Pembrokeshire,Wales on his way to see to it that Richard III died at the Battle of Bosworth Field so he could claim the throne.



 As is known this mission that Henry VI was successful in the battle for Richard III was killed on August 22, 1485 from one of two fatal injuries to the skull, according to a written statement from the University of Leicester. One of the wounds came from a sword and the other one came from a halberd, a two-handed pole weapon with what looks like an axe in it. "One was a "slice" removing a flap of bone" and "the other was caused by a bladed weapon which went through and hit the opposite side of the skull - a depth of more than 10 cm (4 ins)."  In addition to these two wounds, there were six other wounds to the head were so violent that King Richard lost his helmet in battle . In addition to these wounds King Richard suffered"humiliation wounds" as well and it seems, luckily, that he suffered these wounds after he was killed. As if this kind of humiliation wasn't bad enough , he was stripped naked and laid over a horse to show the people of Leicester that Richard III was dead before being buried at Greyfriars Church in Leicester. This made Richard III the last king of England to be killed in battle.

  After his burial at Greyfriars Church Henry VII had a marble and alabaster monument erected to Richard in 1495. According to a discredited tradition, during the Dissolution of Monasteries (when Henry VIII decided he wanted to be the religious ruler of England and all her lands at the time) Richard III's body was thrown into the River Soar, even though it has been suggested that the marble stone could still be seen as late as 1612, in a garden site of Greyfriars. But because of 400 years of development the burial site of Richard III and the garden were lost...until last year.

  On August 24,2012 it was announced by the University of Leicester and the Leicester City Council in conjunction with the Richard III Society that they were going to begin looking for the king's remains. The experts from the University of Leicester Archeological services then set out not only to find the remains of Richard III, but also to find Greyfriars Church because it had been destroyed by Henry VIII's forces during the Dissolution of Monasteries. They compared fixed points on a map with historical sequence, the searchers located the foundation of Greyfriars Church on September 5, 2012 under a parking lot/car park. Two days later, on September 7, 2012, an announcement was made that skeletal remains had been found in the car park under what had been the area of the Church's choir. On September 12 it was announced that the skeleton might be that of Richard III.

The small black dot shows where Richard III was found. The pink outline is Greyfriars Church superimposed over a map of the modern area.



So, a male descendant of Richard III's sister, Anne St. Leger, was found in Canada and  a DNA swab was taken and then the world (to an extent) waited. The results finally came in late on Sunday night February 3, 2013 and it was then announced the following morning that the skeleton was indeed that of Richard III.


  So now we have the long lost King Richard III of England. But what did he look like? We know this is what he looked like when he was found:



But what did he look like alive? This was something that forensic anthropology could work on using craniofacial identification. So Professor Caroline Wilkinson, who is a professor of craniofacial identification, of the University of Dundee analyzed the skull not using the portrait of Richard III, but went on as unknown dead person. This was done by making a 3-D digital bust that when completed, was then replicated in plastic using a rapid prototyping system. That was then painted, prosthetic eyes added and then dressed with a wig, hat and clothing. It was around this time that the portrait of Richard III was used as a guidance.





  So now we have Richard III. May the truth good and bad be known about him.






       

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Richard III Update





  the Tudor Tutor posted on her site with news that BBC Leicester will carry live the results of the DNA of the skeleton that was found in the carpark tomorrow  at 10:00 GMT (Greenwich Means Time), which here in the States it will be 4:00 in the morning my time. If you have trouble converting your local time to GMT here is a conversion chart with each time zone and if you're in the military, Bless Your Heart,you should just know to use military time because it is the same as GMT.

http://www.spectrum-research.com/gmt-time-zone/



Saturday, February 2, 2013

Richard Armitage Has Been Lined Up for Richard III



  Pardon my French... Hot Damn! Richard is closer to making his dream a reality by portraying Richard III! Coming from RichardArmitage Net on Twitter from the HeraldScotland, Phillipa Langley, who is the secretary of the Scottish branch of the Richard III Society has persuaded our favorite dwarf king to portray the real life king for which he was named, Richard III.

  Not only has ms. Langley persuaded our Richard to act in the movie, but she has also written a sympathetic screenplay of Richard III that shines a more favorable light upon him. Most of what has been portrayed as Richard III as basically the Hunchback of England is pretty much Tudor propaganda to give them a good reason to have killed Richard III. Now all that is needed is of course financial backing and I guess from the money that can be gathered will determine if the Richard III project will be made for the big screen or a mini-series. Either way I just hope it will make it to the States and that a vast majority will be able to see it. If it's for television, Are you listening PBS?

  By the way, there is going to be a press conference Monday to announce the results of the genetic testing of the skeleton found in the car park in Leicester that is believed to be Richard III.




Sunday, October 28, 2012

UK Lawmakers Argue Over Richard III's Burial Spot

King Richard III and Lady Anne Neville, Queen of England


There seems to be a battle brewing over the final resting place of Richard III, that is if the bones recovered are actually his. One lawmaker wants to put the remains in Nottinghamshire at the priory of Worksop while a colleague from Leicester South want the remains buried at Leicester Cathedral. All of this is being done in the name of money because they both want to use the remains, if Richard III's, for a tourist attraction. I have an idea, why don't they bury King Richard III next to his wife, Anne Neville, in Westminster Abbey.



Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Has Richard III's Body Been Found?




 This is from The Telegraph website and the article has a video with it. I can just give you the link in the  former sentence. Anyway...


'Strong Evidence' Richard III's Body Has Been Found - With a Curved Spine

Archaeologist searching under a city centre car park for the lost grave of King Richard III have discovered human remains.
A stone frieze which may have been from a choir stall discovered during excavation of a car park in Leicester. Experts hope bones unearthed during the dig will turn out to bewthose of Richard III. The Telegraph in Australia




  A bit more on the subject from BBC :

" Archaeologists searching for the grave of Richard III have said 'strong circumstantial evidence' points to a skeleton being the lost king.

  The English King died in the battle of Bosworth in 1485.

  A dig under a council car park in Leicester has found remains with spinal abnormalities and a "cleaved-in  skull" that suggest it could be Richard III.


Philipa Langley, from the Richard III Society, in one of the trenches where human remains have been found. Mail Online




This one cracks me up, but I kind of get their point. They are, in their minds, honoring Richard III.


Men dressed as medieval knights pose for picture in Leicester on Wednesday - MSN

 

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Archaeology Team Announces "Huge Step Forward" in King Richard III Search




   According to Science Daily , the University of Leicester confirms that they have found the medieval Grey Friars church where King Richard III is buried under a parking lot that was being excavated just over a week ago. At that time two trenches were dug at a council park and this week a third trench was dug. The dig is being filmed for a Channel 4 documentary that is going to come out later this year. It would be nice if the documentary could be shown in America where everyone could see it, because not everyone has BBC America. Are you listening PBS? Sorry just a little personal rant.









Statue of Richard III at Middleham Castle




March 2020

A March 2020 calendar. Time from time I will post one.