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Richard III's bones turned up under a parking lot in the English Midlands city of Leceister, but the dust is hardly settled. Yes, say the archaeologists and pathologists, he did not die on a horse, affirming Shakespeare's version of the king's plaintive cry, "A horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse!"
Scientists say they have found the 500-year-old remains of England's King Richard III under a parking lot in the city of Leicester.
He was king of England, but for centuries he lay without shroud or coffin in an unknown grave, and his name became a byword for villainy.

University of Leicester scientists have made a gruesome discovery beneath a parking lot within the city's boundaries.
Has Britain's lost king been found?