The skeleton, complete except for its feet, is that of a high status man with an arrow in the back and a cleaved skull showing he clearly died in battle. Other evidence pointing to it being the king rests with the skeleton having a spinal curvature, largely declared in olden times as hunchbacks that fits with Shakespeare's description of a back deformity. But final proof rests with DNA from the bones, being analysed at the University of Leicester, which also led the dig, being matched to DNA being extracted from a mouth swab from 55-year-old Michael Ibsen.
Remains of Richard III appear to have been found in Leicester
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Seeded on Fri Jan 18, 2013 9:58 AM

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