But neither is there a case (other than a commercial one) for York, Monty.
He was not born in York (was never himself Duke of York, though that is not relevent) did not die there and never lived in the City. He held a sort of second coronation there and created his son Edward, Prince of Wales but that is not relevent either. His main residence in the county was at Middleham.
I'd argue that Fotheringhay has a better claim than York - he was born in the village and his parents are buried there, as his is brother Edmund.
No, Leicester will get him.
"Potentially fatal injuries to his head"...I understand “Although stories say his body was dumped in the river, many believe the body was claimed by the Franciscans and buried hastily but in a position of honour near the high altar of their church – exactly where the remains were found"
Somehow that has been garbled - the archival evidence of his burial in the Greyfriars (the Franciscan church) days after Bosworth is clear; as is the fact that 10 years or so later a tomb was erected at some cost (I have referred to the financial accounts previously).
The allegation that his remains were thrown in the river is LATER - circa 1535 - when the Greyfriars was dissolved by Henry VIII as part of the English Reformation. That has never been factually supported and the strong likelihood was that Richard's body remained where buried.
But why is it his head is sitting up on a different angle when they found it, obviously not embedded in the same soil and direction as the body itself. This suggests the head was separated, but there is nowhere written he was beheaded. It does say his inujuries were due possibly to a halberd (brrrr) but "potential injuries to the head" would not be stated if his head were severed.
Why the skeleton was as found, I know not. I hypothesised earlier today that the body may simply have been dumped in a hole in the chancel in August 1485 uncoffined, and left there. The other possibility that the still articulated skeleton -maybe still with flesh in 1535ish - was uncoffined and moved when the tomb monument above ground was dismantled. It might still have been shrouded but simply dumped in a corner of the previous grave. The monument was likely a chest tomb - a sort of rectangular box with an effigy atop it - which would have been above ground and would not have contained the body as such.
Just my thoughts,
Phil
He was not born in York (was never himself Duke of York, though that is not relevent) did not die there and never lived in the City. He held a sort of second coronation there and created his son Edward, Prince of Wales but that is not relevent either. His main residence in the county was at Middleham.
I'd argue that Fotheringhay has a better claim than York - he was born in the village and his parents are buried there, as his is brother Edmund.
No, Leicester will get him.
"Potentially fatal injuries to his head"...I understand “Although stories say his body was dumped in the river, many believe the body was claimed by the Franciscans and buried hastily but in a position of honour near the high altar of their church – exactly where the remains were found"
Somehow that has been garbled - the archival evidence of his burial in the Greyfriars (the Franciscan church) days after Bosworth is clear; as is the fact that 10 years or so later a tomb was erected at some cost (I have referred to the financial accounts previously).
The allegation that his remains were thrown in the river is LATER - circa 1535 - when the Greyfriars was dissolved by Henry VIII as part of the English Reformation. That has never been factually supported and the strong likelihood was that Richard's body remained where buried.
But why is it his head is sitting up on a different angle when they found it, obviously not embedded in the same soil and direction as the body itself. This suggests the head was separated, but there is nowhere written he was beheaded. It does say his inujuries were due possibly to a halberd (brrrr) but "potential injuries to the head" would not be stated if his head were severed.
Why the skeleton was as found, I know not. I hypothesised earlier today that the body may simply have been dumped in a hole in the chancel in August 1485 uncoffined, and left there. The other possibility that the still articulated skeleton -maybe still with flesh in 1535ish - was uncoffined and moved when the tomb monument above ground was dismantled. It might still have been shrouded but simply dumped in a corner of the previous grave. The monument was likely a chest tomb - a sort of rectangular box with an effigy atop it - which would have been above ground and would not have contained the body as such.
Just my thoughts,
Phil
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