Body Found in Search for Richard III Almost Destroyed in 1800s

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Richard III and his queen, Anne of Neville, appear in a stained glass window in Cardiff Castle.
(Image credit: University of Leicester)

Last month, a search for King Richard III's remains turned up a human skeleton beneath a parking lot in England. Researchers have a long way to go in the lab before they can determine whether it belongs to the monarch, but they say they were lucky to have found a body at all. Evidence suggests the grave was almost razed by 19th-century builders.

"It was incredibly lucky," archaeologist Mathew Morris, said in a statement. "If the Victorians had dug down 30 cm (12 inches) more they would have built on top of the remains and destroyed them."

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