I guess my big problem is that some things are just kind of inconsistent. The monastery was destroyed under Henry VIII. The logical conclusion is that either Richard's remains were removed to protect them, or they weren't. If they weren't, given that he was entombed and not buried, there should not be relatively intact remains. If he was moved to protect the remains, he shouldn't be there at all. Christopher Wren noted a marker in a garden, but that still would have put the move during the Tudor reign, who would presumably have done a job of it rather than chucking him in the dirt. But as best I can tell, this body was found within the church remains, which means that whoever this was was not reburied after the monastery was leveled.
Add to that a long tradition of those with physical limitations going into the church, and this may be some poor bastard who was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
By the way, 15th century battle axes were two handed affairs, which actually requires more mobility that a sword and shield. Without a shield, you have to use the haft to block, and if you have limited range in one arm, you are truly hosed. And pain is a big consideration. Consider that the average longsword hits a shield hard enough to knock people flying. Your arms get absolutely wrenched about, and it's no fun at all. If someone with severe scoliosis is has their arm forced past it's limitations, the pain isn't just local. It forces the spine outside of it's limitations. Which really only happens once in a warriors lifetime, because as soon as that happens, he's dead.
I doubt. I doubt hard.
And the Anne Mowbrey thing always struck me as excessively creepy and unnecessary.
Add to that a long tradition of those with physical limitations going into the church, and this may be some poor bastard who was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
By the way, 15th century battle axes were two handed affairs, which actually requires more mobility that a sword and shield. Without a shield, you have to use the haft to block, and if you have limited range in one arm, you are truly hosed. And pain is a big consideration. Consider that the average longsword hits a shield hard enough to knock people flying. Your arms get absolutely wrenched about, and it's no fun at all. If someone with severe scoliosis is has their arm forced past it's limitations, the pain isn't just local. It forces the spine outside of it's limitations. Which really only happens once in a warriors lifetime, because as soon as that happens, he's dead.
I doubt. I doubt hard.
And the Anne Mowbrey thing always struck me as excessively creepy and unnecessary.
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