York and Leicester, England (CNN) -- A year ago, historians held their breath as
archaeologist Jo Appleby painstakingly dusted centuries of dirt and debris from
the curved spine and staved-in skull of a skeleton uncovered under a parking
lot in the English city of Leicester.
The story of the long-lost king buried beneath a car park made
headlines around the world -- but 12 months on, excitement has given way to
anger, as enthusiasts and experts argue over what should happen to Richard
III's remains.
The once-missing monarch -- best known as the Shakespearean
villain accused of murdering his nephews, the Princes in the Tower, to take the
throne -- faces one final battle before he can be left to rest in peace: the
increasingly bitter fight over where his bones (minus his feet, lost at some
point during the past 500 years) will be interred.
The judge in the case, Mr. Justice Haddon-Cave has even gone so
far as to plead with all concerned "to avoid embarking on the (legal) Wars
of the Roses, part two," warning that such legal wrangling would be
"unseemly, undignified and unedifying," and urging them to call in an
independent panel of experts to rule on the burial. The original War of the Roses was a bloody civil war which divided England for
decades, and eventually saw Richard's family, thePlantagenets,
swept from power.
While the experts who carried out the search for Richard III's
remains are keen to see him reinterred in Leicester, others believe it was the
medieval king's wish to be buried in York -- the city they claim was closest to
his heart.
English rules and regulations governing exhumations should mean
that the decision is a straightforward one -- such bodies are usually reburied
in the nearest consecrated ground to the archaeological dig site -- but in fact
it is proving anything but, with the launch of legal action to try and halt the
plans.
Those behind the project had always planned for any bodies they
uncovered in their search for Leicester's long-lost Greyfriars Friary to be
reburied at the city's cathedral, just a stone's throw away from the now-famous
car park.
Back then Richard Buckley, lead archaeologist on what he admits to
initially thinking of as a "harebrained scheme," told CNN how he had
applied for a license to exhume any human remains with the words "In the unlikely event that
we find the remains of Richard III..."
But it is this very license that now finds itself at the center of
a court battle between the authorities in Leicester and a group calling itself
the Plantagenet Alliance,
who say more thought should have gone into the reburial.
The Alliance -- made up of people who claim to be distantly
related to Richard III, and headed by Stephen Nicolay, his 17th great nephew --
objects to the lack of consultation over where the newly-rediscovered king's
bones should be laid to rest.
They say that given the remains' royal status, it should not be a
simple case of "finders keepers." Instead, they believe that the
location of the new grave should be up for discussion.
"What we're saying is that for a significant historical
figure such as Richard III, his remains should be the subject of a broad
consultation," explains Matthew Howarth, the lawyer representing the Alliance. "All
the interested parties should be able to have their say, state their case as to
where the bones should be buried... It shouldn't be a closed decision."
The Alliance eventually wants to see the bones taken to York,
a northern city packed to the gills with historic sites and, the group says,
with links to Richard III.
It is a plea backed up by others in the city.
"Richard was the last northern king," explains Paul Toy,
of York's Richard III Museum.
"He had lots of estates and he was constantly moving around, but certainly
he would identify himself as northern, and York was a city that was very close
to his heart... He was very much part of the civic fabric."
By contrast, say the "Yorkists," the ill-fated monarch
had little or no connection to Leicester -- other than the fact he was slung
into a hastily-dug grave there following his death at the Battle of Bosworth
Field in 1485.
Not true, say those in the Leicester camp.
"There's considerable historical evidence that Richard spent
quite a lot of time at his castle here in Leicester," says the city's
mayor, Peter Soulsby. "It was from Leicester that he chose to ride out to
what would prove to be his last battle, and it was to Leicester that he was
returned, and where he was buried on the orders of the new king, Henry.
"And frankly, to be buried by royal command in a city is
pretty powerful evidence that this is where he ought to remain."
Richard III: Hero or
villain?
The Richard III familiar to theatergoers from Shakespeare's play is a born-and-bred bad guy, a child-killing hunchback whose physical deformities echo his deeply nasty nature.
"Deformed, unfinished, sent before my time
Into this breathing world scarce half made up,
And that so lamely and unfashionable
That dogs bark at me as I halt by them..."
"Since I cannot prove a lover," Shakespeare had had him announce, "I am determined to prove a villain."
But modern historians have been at pains to point out that the source material for Shakespeare's and others' portraits of him dates from the reign of his conqueror, Henry VII, and was therefore written with an agenda.
"Richard III was very much a man of his time," says David Baldwin, author of "Richard III". "He was no better or worse than any other nobleman of the era -- if you were offered lands, a fortune, titles, you took them.
"In his case, I think a lot of what happened later in his life can be traced back to his dislocated childhood. His father, his brother had been killed, he was hidden away, driven into exile by the age of nine.
"He was determined to strike first, and that's not surprising given his history."
The Richard III familiar to theatergoers from Shakespeare's play is a born-and-bred bad guy, a child-killing hunchback whose physical deformities echo his deeply nasty nature.
"Deformed, unfinished, sent before my time
Into this breathing world scarce half made up,
And that so lamely and unfashionable
That dogs bark at me as I halt by them..."
"Since I cannot prove a lover," Shakespeare had had him announce, "I am determined to prove a villain."
But modern historians have been at pains to point out that the source material for Shakespeare's and others' portraits of him dates from the reign of his conqueror, Henry VII, and was therefore written with an agenda.
"Richard III was very much a man of his time," says David Baldwin, author of "Richard III". "He was no better or worse than any other nobleman of the era -- if you were offered lands, a fortune, titles, you took them.
"In his case, I think a lot of what happened later in his life can be traced back to his dislocated childhood. His father, his brother had been killed, he was hidden away, driven into exile by the age of nine.
"He was determined to strike first, and that's not surprising given his history."
Soulsby insists that the events of more recent times offer all the
more reason for the monarch to be laid to rest in Leicester.
"Leicester's people have honored Richard for many generations:
We have a King Richard's Road, a King Richard's School, we even have pubs
called after King Richard.
"It's not just the history that compels us -- it is also the
fact that it was the amazing skill of Leicester
University's archaeologists that actually rediscovered the remains,
and their incredible forensic work that confirmed they were the remains of King
Richard.
"Leicester is where he's been for 500 years, and Leicester is
where he deserves to be reburied, with proper ceremony, and in a tomb fit for a
king."
Indeed, the city is speeding full-steam ahead with plans for a new
tomb in the cathedral, where a
memorial stone has long paid tribute to the last Plantagenet king, and for a
visitor center on the site of the Greyfriars car park, telling the story of
Richard's life, his death, and his rediscovery.
The council has already bought an old school which is being turned
into a museum, and it is clear that there is a commercial aspect to the battle
for the bones, since whichever city they end up in is likely to see a tourism
boost.
Granting a judicial review of the case, Haddon-Cave noted that
"the benefit in terms of prestige and increased tourism... is obvious. It
is said that the foot-fall at Leicester Cathedral has increased 20-fold since the discovery."
Sitting in a quiet corner of the Cathedral Close with his wife
Julia, waiting for a tour to begin, Leicestershire local -- but Yorkshire
native -- Peter Farnworth believes that's another reason why the bones should
stay close to where they were found.
"York has oodles and oodles of tourist attractions," he
explained. "Leicester doesn't have many, and if it loses Richard, it will
have one less."
"My clients have no commercial interest in it," says
Howarth. "They won't gain out of any tourism, but they have a very strong
view that Richard's links to the north of England, and to York in particular,
mean that he should be buried here."
For Toy, it comes down to the question of what the king himself
would have wanted.
"As far as we can tell, as far as we have any idea of where
he wanted to be buried himself, it seems to be in York," he told CNN.
"There's a sense that Richard III is a king who has had a bad press -- an
unfair bad press -- and that responding as far as we can to his known wishes
would slightly even things up a bit."
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