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Island woman genetically linked to King Richard III skeleton

[PHOTOS] He was king of England, but for centuries he lay without shroud or coffin in an unknown grave, and his name became a byword for villainy.

Sandra MCulloch / Times Colonist
February 4, 2013

The skull of Richard III is seen in this photograph provided by the University of Leicester and received in London on February 4, 2013. A skeleton with a cleaved skull and a curved spine entombed under a car park is that of Richard III, scientific tests confirmed, solving a 500-year-old mystery about the final resting place of the last English king to die in battle.

A Vancouver Island woman is brushing up her Shakespeare after it was confirmed Monday she’s genetically linked to a skeleton discovered in September under a parking lot in Leicester, England, that’s now proven to be the mortal remains of Richard III.

All Leslie Ibsen of Nanoose really knows of Shakespeare’s tale of Richard III is the line “A horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse,” which he cries at the 1485 Battle of Bosworth Field, where he was slain.

Fifty-three-year-old Ibsen and her two brothers, who live in Ontario and England, get their royal connection from their late mother, Joy, a descendant of Richard’s sister, Anne of York.

In 2004, a researcher took a swab from Joy’s mouth and suggested the possible link to King Richard III. “I was a bit skeptical,” said Ibsen. “My mom was such a monarchist — she was thrilled, while the rest of us were ‘Yeah, right.’”

Ibsen quietly thought the researcher was a lunatic, but lo and behold, the DNA match has proven that the family is, indeed, descended from royalty. “There have been countless people phoning and saying ‘When did you get excited?’ ” said Ibsen on Monday afternoon.

“I was dubious throughout, because I thought they’d have a hard time getting enough [DNA] to prove the skeleton was Richard III’s.

“I didn’t actually get excited until the match was made and they made the announcement.”

The news is bittersweet, since Joy died in 2008: “This would have had a huge impact on her,” said Ibsen. “She was very proud to be British.”

Joy was in her teens when her family left England for Nassau in the Bahamas, then Canada, said Leslie. “She was a huge fan of Queen Elizabeth and especially the Queen mother.”

Leslie said she would like to attend the official burial of Richard III, expected to take place next year, and even meet the Queen, although it’s uncertain if the ceremony will be a royal affair. Queen Elizabeth II is distantly related to Richard III, but not a descendant.

Richard, who died at 32 after two years on the throne, will be interred at Leicester Cathedral.

Confirmation by a University of Leicester archeology team that the skeleton with a cleaved skull and a curved spine dug up from under a car park was that of Richard III solved a 500-year-old mystery about the final resting place of the last English king to die in battle.

The skeleton had 10 wounds, eight of them to the head, clearly inflicted in battle and suggesting the king had lost his helmet. The skull showed a blade had hacked away part of the rear of the skull.

The victor, the future King Henry VII, had Richard’s naked body exposed to the people of Leicester to show the battle was won, ending the bloody 30-year civil conflict known as The Wars of the Roses between the houses of York and Lancaster.

Other wounds were consistent with being caused after death, when his body was taken from the battlefield to nearby Leicester on the back of a horse.

The team used radar and radiocarbon dating as part of the project that located the body on the site of a former church, where records said he had been buried by Franciscan monks. No clothes or personal objects were found and there were no traces of a coffin.

Final confirmation the bones were Richard’s hinged on DNA taken from the skeleton matching that of Michael Ibsen, Leslie’s brother, a Canadian-born furniture maker living in London.

“It’s really difficult to come to grips with the fact that there is some part of you that is part of somebody as famous or infamous as Richard III,” Michael Ibsen said in an interview with Reuters.

There was also a DNA match with another unidentified descendant of Anne of York who wished to remain anonymous. The genetic match was especially significant as it was a rare type of DNA found in only a few percent of the population, said Turi King, a geneticist at the university.

Unlike his medieval relative, Michael Ibsen said he did not plan to put forward a claim to the throne: “I think our chances are long gone.”

smcculloch@timescolonist.com

— With a file from The Associated Press 

- - -

JILL LAWLESS, The Associated Press

LEICESTER, England - He was king of England, but for centuries he lay without shroud or coffin in an unknown grave, and his name became a byword for villainy.

On Monday, scientists announced they had rescued the remains of Richard III from anonymity — and the monarch's fans hope a revival of his reputation will soon follow.

In a dramatically orchestrated news conference, a team of archaeologists, geneticists, genealogists and other scientists from the University of Leicester announced that tests had proven what they scarcely dared to hope — a scarred and broken skeleton unearthed under a drab municipal parking lot was that of the 15th-century king, the last English monarch to die in battle.

Lead archaeologist Richard Butler said that a battery of tests proved "beyond reasonable doubt" that the remains were the king's.

Lin Foxhall, head of the university's school of archaeology, said the discovery "could end up rewriting a little bit of history in a big way."

Few monarchs have seen their reputations decline as much after death as Richard III. He ruled England between 1483 and 1485, during the decades-long battle over the throne known as the Wars of the Roses, which pitted two wings of the ruling Plantagenet dynasty — York and Lancaster — against one another.

His brief reign saw liberal reforms, including the introduction of the right to bail and the lifting of restrictions on books and printing presses.

But his rule was challenged, and he was defeated and killed by the army of Henry Tudor, who took the throne as King Henry VII and ended the Plantagenet line. Britain's current monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, is distantly related to Richard, but is not a descendant.

After his death, historians writing under the victorious Tudors comprehensively trashed Richard's reputation, accusing him of myriad crimes — most famously, the murder of his two nephews, the "Princes in the Tower."

William Shakespeare indelibly depicted Richard as a hunchbacked usurper who left a trail of bodies on his way to the throne before dying in battle, shouting "My kingdom for a horse."

That view was repeated by many historians, and Richard remains a villain in the popular imagination. But others say Richard's reputation was unjustly smeared by his Tudor successors.

Philippa Langley of the Richard III Society — which seeks to restore the late king's reputation and backed the search for his grave— said that for centuries Richard's story has been told by others, many of them hostile.

She hopes a new surge of interest, along with evidence from the skeleton about how the king lived and died — and how he was mistreated after death — will help restore his reputation.

"A wind of change is blowing, one that will seek out the truth about the real Richard III," she said.

Langley, who helped launch the search for the king, said she could scarcely believe her quest had paid off.

"Everyone thought that I was mad," she said. "It's not the easiest pitch in the world, to look for a king under a council car park."

The location of Richard's body was unknown for centuries. He died in August 1485 at the Battle of Bosworth Field in the English Midlands, and records say he was buried by the Franciscan monks of Grey Friars at their church in Leicester, 100 miles (160 kilometres) north of London.

The church was closed and dismantled after King Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries in 1538, and its location eventually was forgotten by most local residents.

There were tales that the king's bones had been dug up and thrown in a nearby river in the 16th century.

Then last year a team led by University of Leicester archaeologist Richard Buckley identified a possible location of the grave through map regression analysis, starting with a current map of the general area of the former church and analyzing earlier maps to discover what had changed and not changed. Ground-penetrating radar was used to find the best places to start digging.

The team began excavating in a parking lot last August. Within a week they had located thick walls and the remains of tiled floors. Soon after, they found human remains — the skeleton of an adult male who appeared to have died in battle.

He had been buried unceremoniously, with no coffin or shroud — plausible for a despised and defeated enemy.

Increasingly excited, the researchers set out to conduct a battery of scientific tests, including radiocarbon dating to determine the skeleton's age, to see whether, against the odds, they really had found the king.

They found the skeleton belonged to a man in his late 20s to late 30s who died between 1455 and 1540. Richard was 32 when he died in 1485.

Archaeological bone specialist Jo Appleby, a lecturer in human bioarchaeology at Leicester, said study of the bones provided "a highly convincing case for identification of Richard III."

Appleby said the 10 injuries to the body were inflicted by weapons such as swords, daggers and halberds and were consistent with accounts of Richard being struck down in battle — his helmet knocked from his head — before his body was stripped naked and flung over the back of a horse in disgrace.

Appleby said two of the blows to the head could have been fatal. Other scars, including a knife wound to the buttock, bore the hallmarks of "humiliation injuries" inflicted after death.

The remains also displayed signs of scoliosis, a form of spinal curvature, consistent with contemporary accounts of Richard's appearance, though not the withered arm Shakespeare describes.

DNA from the skeleton matched a sample taken from Michael Ibsen, a distant living relative of Richard's sister. The project's lead geneticist, Turi King, said Ibsen, a Canadian carpenter living in London, shares with the skeleton a rare strain of mitochondrial DNA. The same DNA group also matches a second living descendant, who wants to remain anonymous.

King said that between 1 and 2 per cent of the population belongs to this genetic sub-group, so the DNA evidence is not definitive proof in itself of the skeleton's identity. But combined with the archaeological evidence, it left little doubt the skeleton belonged to Richard.

Ibsen, a 17th great-grand-nephew of Richard's older sister, said he was "stunned" by the discovery.

"It's difficult to digest," he said.

Some scientists felt qualms about the haste with which the Leicester team announced its results. The findings have not been published in peer-reviewed scientific journals, though the university said they soon would be.

"It's a bizarre way of going about things," said Mark Horton, a professor of archaeology at the University of Bristol — although he said "overwhelming circumstantial evidence" identified the skeleton as Richard's.

Archaeologist Mike Pitts, editor of British Archaeology magazine, also said he found the evidence persuasive.

"I don't think there is any question. It is Richard III," said Pitts, who was not affiliated with the research team.

The discovery is a boon for the city of Leicester, which has bought a building next to the parking lot to serve as a visitor centre and museum.

On Monday, the king's skeleton lay in a glass box in a meeting room within the university library. It was a browned, fragile-looking thing, its skull pocked with injuries, missing its feet — which scientists say were disturbed sometime after burial — and with a pronounced s-shape to the spine.

Soon the remains will be moved to an undisclosed secure location, and next year Richard will, at last, get a king's burial, interred with pomp and ceremony in Leicester Cathedral.

It is a day Langley, of the Richard III Society, has dreamed of seeing.

"We have searched for him, we have found him — it is now time to honour him," she said.

_____

Online:

The Search for Richard III: http://www2.le.ac.uk/projects/greyfriars

Richard III Society: http://www.richardiii.net/

Jill Lawless can be reached at http://Twitter.com/JillLawless

© Copyright 2013

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