It is perhaps one of the greatest murder mystery stories in British history - a young king and his brother simply vanish. The boys, now dubbed “the Princes in the Tower , were held in the Tower of London in 1483, but disappeared from public view, never to be seen again.
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Richard III has long been held responsible for the murder of his nephews in a dispute about succession to the throne. But Richard’s defenders have pointed to a lack of hard evidence to connect the king to the disappearance of the princes - who were aged just 12 and nine when Richard took the throne in June 1483.
Princes in the Tower: how I established a direct link between Richard III and the two murders
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New Study Strengthens Claims Richard III Murdered The Princes in the Tower
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Did Richard III Really Murder His Nephews?
The accusation against Richard III first gained widespread attention in 1513, when the famed statesman and philosopher Sir Thomas More published his scathing biography
The History of King Richard III . Historians have long wondered whether More’s contention that Richard III ordered the execution of his nephews was credible, but Professor Thornton asserts that his research proves it was. Thornton has identified two associates of More as the sons of one of the hired assassins who actually committed the murders, concluding that More discovered the true story about the fate of the two princes through his contact with these individuals.
King Richard III, Insaet: the bones of the real Richard discovered beneath a car park in Leicester in 2012 York s favourite medieval monarch, King Richard III, WAS involved in the notorious murder of the Princes in the Tower , according to a Yorkshire history professor. Prof Tim Thornton of the University of Huddersfield says clear evidence has come to light to implicate Richard in the murders. Richard has long been held responsible for the murder of his nephews - the young King Edward V and his brother Richard, Duke of York, dubbed ‘the Princes in the Tower’ - in a dispute about succession to the throne.