Richard III & the Car Park

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  • Bridewell
    Commissioner
    • Apr 2011
    • 4038

    #976
    Originally posted by Monty View Post
    https://leics.police.uk/news-appeals...ng-richard-iii

    The shall be a City of London Police presence at the re internment of King Richard.


    Monty
    It speaks volumes that they have to go as far afield as the City of London Police to find a force with a Mounted section. O tempora! O mores!
    I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.

    Comment

    • Mayerling
      Superintendent
      • Feb 2008
      • 2762

      #977
      A new rediscovered body story beginning

      Sidelight to the decent reinternment of King Richard in Leicester.

      The New York Times had an article or two and an editorial in it in the last three days about the discovery of the remains of ten people buried in holy ground in a Spanish church. One they feel may be Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, author of "Don Quixote", "The Exemplary Novels", and other works. Oddly enough, if it is possible to identify any of the remains as his, next year will be the four hundredth anniversary of his death (April 1616).

      Jeff

      Comment

      • Rosella
        Chief Inspector
        • Sep 2014
        • 1542

        #978
        Very interesting, Mayerling. It will be wonderful if they can identify the remains in time for the anniversary.

        On another note, though, the remains of the last Tsar his wife and three daughters may be disinterred to be tested again, due to doubts being expressed about the authenticity of the ID!! The doubters include a Pretender to the Russian throne, Church officials and an official in Putin government circles!

        The Tsarevich and one daughter's remains, found later than the others, havent even received a funeral yet and are still in a box in storage.

        Comment

        • Sally
          Superintendent
          • Sep 2010
          • 2100

          #979
          What did I tell you??

          Look at that! No surprise there...



          Well, maybe I'll record it for later - if only to see Philippa Gregory finding the truth.

          There's a first time for everything, I guess.

          Comment

          • Rosella
            Chief Inspector
            • Sep 2014
            • 1542

            #980
            It's become very fashionable since his remains have been discovered to believe that Richard was competely innocent of all charges. We'll see but I'm not holding my breath.

            Comment

            • Graham
              Assistant Commissioner
              • Feb 2008
              • 3813

              #981
              Originally posted by Sally View Post
              Look at that! No surprise there...



              Well, maybe I'll record it for later - if only to see Philippa Gregory finding the truth.

              There's a first time for everything, I guess.
              I started watching this but had to give up because of the crude, infantile and pointless dumb-show "dramatisations" that now plague virtually every TV prog whose subject is History. These were about the worst I've seen, and that's saying something. Is it just me? Shame, as from what I saw at least one of the talking-heads had begun to ask relevant questions about Catherine Woodville (portrayed in dumb-show as wearing an uplift bra), who I always felt has been whitewashed by history in a similar way that Richard has been tar-brushed. Ah well, the rugby was good.......

              Graham
              We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

              Comment

              • Graham
                Assistant Commissioner
                • Feb 2008
                • 3813

                #982
                Just realised I wrote 'Catherine' instead of 'Elizabeth' Woodville. What was I thinking?

                Graham
                We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

                Comment

                • Robert
                  Commissioner
                  • Feb 2008
                  • 5163

                  #983
                  You were thinking "nice bra."

                  Comment

                  • Beowulf
                    Sergeant
                    • Jan 2012
                    • 537

                    #984
                    It's really kind of wonderful that the modern day people in England are able to attend the funeral one of the Kings of England from the Middle ages. There won't be another one of these events.

                    I wonder how Henry VII would react?

                    So, will people place Roses on his grave?

                    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/history/1...or-a-king.html

                    21 Gun Salute

                    Attached Files
                    Last edited by Beowulf; 03-22-2015, 08:35 AM.

                    Comment

                    • Beowulf
                      Sergeant
                      • Jan 2012
                      • 537

                      #985
                      They found a young man with nearly identical scoliosis as Richard III, living today, and are studying him. Dominick Smee. He is able to do most all a man with a normal spine can do, but exhausts quickly with heavy work, (eg. battle) due to spine affecting lungs. Richard would've had the same problem.

                      Comment

                      • Graham
                        Assistant Commissioner
                        • Feb 2008
                        • 3813

                        #986
                        I don't know if this has been mentioned before on this (long) thread, but the Battle Of Bosworth was originally known as the Battle Of Redemore, which was the name given to the area roughly between Dadlington and Shenton north and south of the Fenn Lanes. "Rede" because of the marshy nature of the ground, in which reeds grew (and still do). Market Bosworth itself is a couple of miles away, but in the decades after the battle it was the nearest reasonably-sized settlement and hence it gave its name to the Battle for reasons of geographic identification. Richard according to local tradition was killed at 'Sandeford', but I don't think the actual place has ever been positively identified. According to tradition, the whole battle was done and dusted in a little over a couple of hours.

                        I watched the Channel 4 prog this evening, and enjoyed it, apart from David Starkey and his short temper.

                        Graham
                        We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

                        Comment

                        • Errata
                          Assistant Commissioner
                          • Sep 2010
                          • 3060

                          #987
                          Originally posted by Beowulf View Post
                          They found a young man with nearly identical scoliosis as Richard III, living today, and are studying him. Dominick Smee. He is able to do most all a man with a normal spine can do, but exhausts quickly with heavy work, (eg. battle) due to spine affecting lungs. Richard would've had the same problem.

                          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDHDvnnK4nI
                          So by the time he got to battle Richard would have exhausted himself by merely staying upright in the armor on a running horse.

                          Except that's not what happened. So what did Richard know that allowed him to fight for hours that Mr. Smee does not know?

                          I wish they had gone ahead and articulated a replica of the skeleton. The way it is laid out on the table is not how it was, just like his ribs didn't look like that, or his hips either. Discs would help enormously, and the individual vertebra are sort of spiraling on the table where they would not in a person.
                          The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

                          Comment

                          • Graham
                            Assistant Commissioner
                            • Feb 2008
                            • 3813

                            #988
                            Richard, when still a teenager, did all right at the battles of Barnet and Tewkesbury.

                            But as I said in my previous post, Errata, the Battle of Bosworth was all over in not much more than 2 hours, one of the shortest 'major' battles in English history.

                            Graham
                            We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

                            Comment

                            • Beowulf
                              Sergeant
                              • Jan 2012
                              • 537

                              #989
                              Originally posted by Errata View Post
                              So by the time he got to battle Richard would have exhausted himself by merely staying upright in the armor on a running horse.

                              Except that's not what happened. So what did Richard know that allowed him to fight for hours that Mr. Smee does not know?

                              I wish they had gone ahead and articulated a replica of the skeleton. The way it is laid out on the table is not how it was, just like his ribs didn't look like that, or his hips either. Discs would help enormously, and the individual vertebra are sort of spiraling on the table where they would not in a person.
                              No. They do not think his problem was on the horse. His problem was after he was off the horse. That is when he became vulnerable.

                              The English saddle and armor actually helped him stay upright and fight. He could do it. That kid with the same spine was able to do so, testing the modern saddle and the saddle of the day, very different from each other. He realized the armor worked in his stead. It kept him upright. He was not having a problem performing on the horse.



                              The spine lays out only one way. Richard III's spine is nearly identical to Dominick's spine.

                              Comment

                              • Graham
                                Assistant Commissioner
                                • Feb 2008
                                • 3813

                                #990
                                Originally posted by Beowulf View Post
                                No. They do not think his problem was on the horse. His problem was after he was off the horse. That is when he became vulnerable.

                                The English saddle and armor actually helped him stay upright and fight. He could do it. That kid with the same spine was able to do so, testing the modern saddle and the saddle of the day, very different from each other. He realized the armor worked in his stead. It kept him upright. He was not having a problem performing on the horse.



                                The spine lays out only one way. Richard III's spine is nearly identical to Dominick's spine.
                                His horse became bogged down in the marsh, which enabled opposing foot-soldiers to drag Richard from the horse and despatch him, initially with one massive blow to the back of the head, which almost certainly killed him. He received probably 11 blows to the skull, which could not have been administered had he still been mounted.

                                Full armour in those days was designed for fighting on horse-back, not on foot. Once he was dismounted and surrounded by opposing foot-soldiers, he was a goner, nothing to do with his scoliosis. In continental wars, English foot-soldiers became adept at de-horseing opposing mounted warriors and keeping them in one piece, for purposes of ransome. At Bosworth, this did not apply. Each side was fighting for control of the nation.

                                There is absolutely no evidence to suggest that Richard was physically any less able to fight than any of his contemporaries, Mr Smee or anyone else notwithstanding.

                                Graham
                                We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

                                Comment

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