King Richard III will be re-buried nearly 530 years after he was slain in battle and dumped in a grave.
The remains of Richard the last English king to die in battle were found in a Leicester car park in 2012.
His body will be re-interred at Leicester Cathedral next week in an oak coffin designed by a descendant whose DNA helped identify the remains.
He will also win the regal recognition supporters say his conqueror Henry Tudor, later Henry VII, denied him.
The whole point was if Richards remains were found he would get the dignified and honourable burial he was denied in 1485, said Phil Stone, chairman of the Richard III Society, which was formed 90-years-ago and now has several thousand supporters worldwide.
On Sunday, a cortege with his coffin will tour villages in Leicestershire and the battlefield site at Bosworth then placed on public display at Leicester Cathedral before re-burial next Thursday.
Screenwriter and King Richard III enthusiast Philippa Langley said: The last time he left that battlefield, he left it naked slung over a horse.
To take him back him there and to honour him there now as a king, I think its making peace with the past so I hope that will be a special thing.
Tests showed he the king suffered 11 wounds, including nine to the skull and a potentially fatal blow to the pelvis.
The wounds were consistent with accounts that he died, unhorsed, having lost his helmet in battle.
http://metro.co.uk/2015/03/19/king-...-years-after-he-was-killed-in-battle-5111374/
quick summary of his life from the daily mail:
Born in 1452, Richard Plantagenet did not grow up expecting to be King. He was the 12th of 13 children of the Duke of York, a powerful cousin of King Henry VI.
But with the War of the Roses under way between the houses of Lancaster and York, life could be precarious. As a teenager, he developed scoliosis, a curvature of the spine, but become an accomplished warrior.
After Richards older brother toppled Henry VI to become King Edward IV in 1461, the new monarch left him to run much of the North of England and keep the Scots at bay. When Edward IV died in 1483, Richard was named Lord Protector of his son and heir, the 12-year-old Edward V. But the young King was promptly declared illegitimate, and he and his brother then conveniently disappeared, allegedly murdered in the Tower of London. Richard was made King.
Though his reign saw important legal innovations, not least the bail system, it was marked by tragedy: his only son died in 1484.
In 1485, Henry Tudor, of the House of Lancaster, raised an army against Richard and the two forces met at Bosworth, Leicestershire, on August 22. While Henry stayed well back from the fray, Richard was in the thick of it. But when some of his nobles switched sides, the King was defeated and killed.
His reputation would later be buried by Shakespeare, who cemented the enduring image of Richard III as a pantomime villain.
the car park where his remains were found
Model of his tomb at Leicester Cathedral after £2.5 million of alterations
Channel 4 is showing a three hour special tomorrow from 5pm.