How the Long-Lost Body of Richard III Was Found Under a Parking Lot: Solving a 500-Year-Old Mystery

Shake­speare’s The Tragedy of Richard the Third begins with the epony­mous char­ac­ter utter­ing the famous line “Now is the win­ter of our dis­con­tent.” It ends at the Bat­tle of Bosworth Field, by which point his vil­lain­ous schemes have come to ruin and his deser­tion by Lord Stan­ley seems to have sealed his fate. “A horse, a horse, my king­dom for a horse,” he cries out, coin­ing anoth­er expres­sion used four cen­turies lat­er before being slain by the Earl of Rich­mond, the man who would be Hen­ry VII. Though Shake­speare him­self was writ­ing more than 100 years after the his­tor­i­cal events he dra­ma­tized, he includ­ed lit­tle after the event of Richard’s death, whose most fas­ci­nat­ing mys­tery was in any case only solved in our own time.

You can see the sto­ry of Richard III’s long-unknown where­abouts in the Pri­mal Space video above. Accord­ing to records, says the nar­ra­tor, “he was buried uncer­e­mo­ni­ous­ly beneath the Greyfri­ars Church in Leices­ter, and a mon­u­ment was even­tu­al­ly placed above his grave.” When Hen­ry VIII ordered such hous­es of wor­ship shut down forty years lat­er, Greyfri­ars was among the insti­tu­tions demol­ished.

Every­one even­tu­al­ly came to believe that, amid this destruc­tion, Richard’s body had been exhumed and tossed off the Bow Bridge. Only in the ear­ly two-thou­sands did a search for his corpse com­mence in earnest, spear­head­ed by the Richard III Soci­ety. Hav­ing deter­mined that the Bow Bridge sto­ry had been made up, the soci­ety’s mem­bers then had to pin down the long-con­fused for­mer loca­tion of Greyfri­ars Church.

One of them, Philip­pa Lan­g­ley, got the hunch to start look­ing under a Leices­ter park­ing lot. Bud­getary lim­i­ta­tions forced her team to try dig­ging just three trench­es across spaces like­li­est to cross the church’s foot­print. “Amaz­ing­ly, just six hours into the first day, they came across a skele­ton” with skull dam­age and spinal cur­va­ture. Richard was indeed described as a “hunch­back” in his life­time, but in the twen­ty-first cen­tu­ry, only DNA evi­dence clos­es the case. Its acqui­si­tion neces­si­tat­ed both find­ing a cou­ple unbro­ken female lines (the only means of trans­mit­ting mito­chon­dr­i­al DNA) from his sis­ter down to liv­ing, testable indi­vid­u­als while car­bon-dat­ing the skele­ton. Sure enough, Richard turned out to have been in eter­nal repose not just under that park­ing lot, but near a sten­ciled let­ter R — the kind of coin­ci­dence from which even the Bard him­self might have shied away.

Relat­ed con­tent:

Con­firmed: The Bones of Richard III (1452–1485) Found Under a UK Park­ing Lot

74 Ways Char­ac­ters Die in Shakespeare’s Plays Shown in a Handy Info­graph­ic: From Snakebites to Lack of Sleep

How Eng­land First Became Eng­land: An Ani­mat­ed His­to­ry

Hear What Ham­let, Richard III & King Lear Sound­ed Like in Shakespeare’s Orig­i­nal Pro­nun­ci­a­tion

A New Analy­sis of Beethoven’s DNA Reveals That Lead Poi­son­ing Could Have Caused His Deaf­ness

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.


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