Did he or did he not? – History and Reality – A Moment in Time

 

After a long time, I am back to do a post here on this website. The reason for that is a special day today, the 22nd of August 2018:

 

www.glitter-graphics.com

Happy Birthday, Richard Armitage!

 

 

Servetus has a thoughtful and wonderfully insightful blog for the birthday celebrations here.

 

 

The other event that is returning today for the 533rd time is the Battle of Bosworth, where King Richard III died and which is the reason for Richard Armitage’s first name.

 

After the death of King Richard III, history and myth was not kind to the king.

That especially is a fact that grips me, as right now I have quite some of my acquaintances who – because of illness or age – are penning down their legacy and making notes how they want to be remembered after their deaths. That is not only a look and planning into an uncertain future, anticipating what might happen, but also demands a review of the life they lead, what they did, and from all their planning and working, to pin the fluidity of life down to what really worked out.

 

King Richard III never had a chance to do such a planning and at least we do not know about the review he would give his own life. Others determined, what we remember of the king and his deeds.

 

A main crime always pinned on the king, was the murder of his two young nephews, the known ‘Princes in the Tower’.

 

The main researcher for finding King Richard III, Dr. John Ashdown-Hill, before his own death finished a research into this topic, which just recently was published posthumously and I got a chance to read already.

 

I mention this book here, because its unique research does not only go into the facts, as much as we know about them, but also shows the development of ‘opinion’ and ‘myth’ around the ‘event’, if it indeed was one. The rich detail and meticulous research we are used to in the work of Dr. Ashdown-Hill, fascinates with giving a clear structure to all the rumours and suspicions, circling around King Richard III and also follows their historical progression. That in itself is a recommendable feat, if Dr. Ashdown-Hill was not already remembered in our ‘KRA-Hall of Fame’ as the historical researcher who made the finding of King Richard III possible.

 

Dr. John Ashdown-Hill: “The Mythology of the Princes in the Tower, Amberley Publishing, 2018
www.amberley-books.com
ISBN 978 1 4456 7941 9 (hardback)
ISBN 978 1 4456 7942 6 (ebook)

 

 

I have recognised that for the U.S. the publishing date is set as November 1st, 2018. In the U.K. and other regions, the book is already available. It also will come out as e-book, so please check in your region. (Embedded links here are only given for your convenience.)

 

 

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KRA NewsStream


March 28, 2014

Richard III expert: The skeleton in the car park may not be missing monarch after all (by Cahal Milmo, The Independent)


March 28, 2014

Contemporary “War Of The Roses” Among Academics Over Claimed Richard III Remains Discovery (by Charles Moore, BioNews Texas)


March 28, 2014

Questions arise as to the validity of Richard III remains (by Cindy Stockman, Royal Central (Blog))


March 28, 2014

Richard III: University defends claims skeleton dug up in Leicester car park may not be king (by Peter Warzynski, Leicester Mercury)


March 28, 2014

Is it Richard III? (by ap507, University of Leicester)


March 28, 2014

Was the skeleton in the Leicester car park really Richard III? (by Emma McFarnon, BBC History Extra)


March 27, 2014

‘Richard III remains’ found in Leicester car park have doubt cast upon them (by Maev Kennedy, The Guardian)


March 27, 2014

Do you think the Leicester skeleton is Richard III? (by Emma McFarnon, BBC History Extra)


March 24, 2014

Hunt set to begin for Richard III’s favourite York haunt (Yorkshire Post)


March 21, 2014

Tributes paid to Richard III Museum founder Mike Bennett (by Mike Laycock, The York Press)


 

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