Revealed inside the tomb of King Richard III

Scientists at the Department of Archeology at the University of Leicester (UK) reveal some unusual details when excavating the tomb of King Richard III.

>>>Found the British king's remains under the parking lot

Contrary to what people often think of a solemn funeral in the Royal, the last king of York's house - King Richard III is buried quite hastily.

The king's remains were found in August 2012 at a parking lot of the Leicester City Commission - where he lost at Bosworth 500 years ago. After 12 weeks of DNA testing, scientists concluded that this is the infamous king, often appearing in the writings of the great writer Shakespeare.

It is noteworthy that when excavating the remains, King Richard III seems to be buried in a hurry when the posture of the skeleton is crushed to a diamond-shaped hole with hands tied.

Picture 1 of Revealed inside the tomb of King Richard III
The diamond-shaped tomb is too short for King Richard III's body
with the ground below the excavated foot is much smaller than the upper part.

Picture 2 of Revealed inside the tomb of King Richard III

The photographs show that his head was erected against a corner of the grave, with no sign of a shroud or coffin. There is also evidence that the rulers of the Middle Ages in just two years were handcuffed when buried. This shows that the grave digger did not rearrange the body of the dead in an instant when lowering it, or rather, they did not have any respect for the dead. This inference is consistent with the ancient material or in Shakespeare's compositions that describe 'ugly, evil king'.

Picture 3 of Revealed inside the tomb of King Richard III
Detailed image of King Richard III's skeleton after excavation

Picture 4 of Revealed inside the tomb of King Richard III
. and face after being restored

Scientists at Leicester University are synthesizing documents so far, to write a full book about the life of this 32-year-old king.