Leicestershire Revisited

Richard Armitage Birthday Week 2012

 

photo: goleicestershire

 
The BBC series “Kibworth”, with historian Michael Wood, (broadcast on PBS) renewed a desire to return (in cyberspace) to that midlands county. Which was already stimulated by the history of Richard III and the Battle of Bosworth. Oh, and that other Richard, of our acquaintance, celebrating a birthday this month….
 

richardarmitagenet Candids Gallery

 
Kibworth, a village a few miles outside Leicester, was revealed by Michael Wood as a complete microcosm of “the story of England”, from pre-Roman settlement to the present day. During a months’-long sojourn in the village (almost of town proportion now), Mr. Wood explored the origins and progress of this supposedly unremarkable part of the county. He did so with the enthusiastic participation of the inhabitants. Kibworth represents a microcosm of the races/nationalities who have become embedded in the DNA of England. Continuing research by DNA scientists is not conclusive yet on the subject of who is a Celt and who isn’t. No doubt that debate will continue.
 
Leicestershire – worth a visit? Leicester itself, now with a growing Asian population. Yet another layer of the long-existing multi-culturalism of England, with waves of settlers and invaders dating from the Bronze Age. Britain has always been a melting-pot.
 

Leicester Guildhall. Wikipedia: attribution: NotFromUtrecht

 

Digging up History… (in spades)

 
Sufficient research has been done to suggest that the bones of Richard III probably did not end in the River Soar, but at some point, were removed to Greyfriars in Leicester and properly interred there. Thanks to some Tudors, Greyfriars has long since been pounded into the ground. An archaeological project, sponsored by the University of Leicester, and the City Council, among other supporters, has begun a dig. If they are correct about the evidence that there was a coffin containing the remains of the last Plantagenet king, discovery, and DNA testing will add to the historical record of England.
 
More than five hundred years since Richard III was brutally murdered by the party of the Lancastrian invader Henry (Tudor) VII, the question of Richard’s culpability in the apparent deaths of his pre-adolescent nephews, remains disputed. The last Plantagenet died at Bosworth, Leicestershire, August 22, 1485. August 22nd. Time for celebration of life.
 

Henry VII

Richard III


 
 
 
 
 
 
Based on the portraits, who would you prefer?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Leicestershire and Richard Armitage

 
Although Mr. Armitage has grown (yes, grown. And grown (And grown…) to be a citizen of the world, as well as of London, the heart of England, no doubt, had been a good grounding site for an English actor. And Leicestershire is in the heart of England. Perhaps the heart of England. Perhaps Mr. Armitage will play the role of his namesake one day, in a realistic production of that tudorised king. For the numerous among our support group who are not overly fond of beards, they will be relieved to know that clean-shaven was the norm with the 15th C man….
 
And during this week, we wish Mr. Armitage :
 

MANY HAPPY RETURNS!

 
(He’s all grown-up, now. 😀 )
 
 

2 Responses to Leicestershire Revisited

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture.
Anti-Spam Image

Petition - Status !

As of July
22nd 2022, 6 p.m. (CET)
we have 2482 signatures.

Go to sign...

 


Search the Site:

Subscribe to News-Updates:

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner


KRA NewsStream


March 26, 2015

King Richard III reburial: RECAP on updates from Leicester (by Sam Adams, Mirror.co.uk)


March 26, 2015

King Richard III’s re-interment carries pomp and grandeur of state funeral (by Maev Kennedy, The Guardian)


March 26, 2015

King Richard III of England Is Reburied in Leicester Cathedral (by John F. Burns, New York Times)


March 26, 2015

Queen Elizabeth II’s Letter for King Richard III’s re-interment ceremony in Leicester Cathedral (by Queen Elizabeth II, Royal Letter)


March 26, 2015

Richard by Carol Ann Duffy (by Carol Ann Duffy, The Guardian)


March 26, 2015

Richard III – The Answers (by Matthew Lewis, Matt’s History Blog)


March 25, 2015

Richard III DNA tests uncover evidence of further royal scandal (by Ian Sample, The Guardian)


March 25, 2015

Richard III: 20,000 visit coffin in Leicester Cathedral (BBC News)


March 25, 2015

People start queuing at 4am for last chance to see Richard III coffin at Leicester Cathedral (by atroughton, Leicester Mercury)


March 25, 2015

King Richard III: Special digital edition now available to download (Leicester Mercury)


 

(To further news & commented NewsStream)

Subscribe to NewsStream-Updates:

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner


 

KRA BookTips

.com.co.uk

KRA-Banner Quiz 2015
KRA-Banner Quiz 2014

♛ Recent Posts ♛


KRA-Week 2013 - SideBanner 1

♛ Post Archive ♛


King Richard Fan Art Fan-Art banner small