Court: Richard III to rest in Leicester

LONDON -- Nearly 530 years after the death of Richard III in battle, Britain's high court ruled Friday that the king immortalized by Shakespeare as a misshapen, murderous villain is to be buried in Leicester, the city where his skeleton was found beneath a parking lot in 2012.

The court dismissed a competing campaign by some of the deposed monarch's distant relations to have him interred in York, in northern England, which they argued had a stronger claim on his affections -- and his bones.

"It is time for Richard III to be given a dignified reburial, and finally laid to rest," the three justices who heard the case wrote, paving the way for the long-ago ruler to be interred in Leicester Cathedral.

The cathedral is near the site where archaeologists dug in search of the last recorded place where Richard's body was buried, beneath the floor of a lost medieval church. In September 2012, on one of the few bits of land not built over in downtown Leicester, they unearthed the skeleton of a man who had clearly suffered grievous battle wounds.

DNA and other tests proved that the remains belonged to Richard, the final Plantagenet king and the last English monarch to die in combat. He was killed Aug. 22, 1485, at Bosworth Field, outside Leicester, in a fight that ushered in the long reign of the Tudors, including Henry VIII and Elizabeth I.

A group called the Plantagenet Alliance challenged the decision to rebury Richard in the nearby cathedral, arguing that York would be more appropriate because he spent much of his childhood and early adult life in and around that city. The group accused the government of failing to consult widely enough before it granted the burial license to Leicester.

But in what it called a "unique and exceptional" case, the high court Friday upheld the government's decision. Despite the "trenchant views expressed by rival factions," the court noted, officials had followed proper protocol regarding discovered remains; Henry VII, Richard's successor, had buried him in Leicester; and the present queen, Elizabeth II, appeared content with the idea of keeping him there.

While an appeal of the ruling is possible, David Monteith, the dean of Leicester Cathedral, described the court's judgment as "clear and unequivocal."

"He fell here. He's lain here for over 500 years. The cathedral is about 150 meters from the site of discovery," Monteith said.

Despite Richard's strong ties to York, "as a king of England in medieval times, he spent time all across England," said Monteith. "He knew the city of York well, but he knew the city of Leicester well. He didn't leave any will saying [where] he should be buried. ... We're simply doing what the law requires."

The cathedral has already gone to some expense to prepare for a reinterment, tentatively scheduled for spring next year. A new tomb will be built in the heart of the church, replacing the existing memorial marker, and planning is underway for a solemn service befitting a man who was England's "anointed king."

Scholars and amateur historians are bitterly divided over whether Richard was the bloodthirsty tyrant depicted by Shakespeare who had his two young nephews executed in the Tower of London so that he could claim the crown for himself, or an enlightened ruler who instituted lasting legal changes but whose name was indelibly smeared by Tudor propagandists after his death.

A Section on 05/24/2014

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