Greyfriars, Leicester, from https://www.storyofleicester.info/faith-belief/grey-friars/

I have come upon this site which tells of forthcoming new attractions at Leicester’s museums. From it I have taken the following extract:

“….The city’s King Richard III Visitor Centre is also in line for investment, with a new immersive experience forming part of the story told at the award-winning attraction….  

“….Later this year, visitors will be able to enjoy a view of the long-gone medieval Greyfriars friary – where the king was hastily buried in 1485 – thanks to augmented reality technology….”

Call me impatient, but I wanted to see if there were any reconstructions of medieval Greyfriars already ‘out there’, and I found this site, from which the above illustration is taken. It’s very interesting, and well worth a read.


Subscribe to my newsletter

  1. Yes it’s quite an impressive piece of reconstruction by the de Montfort students, it was available back when Richard was first rediscovered, and people were debating the possible design of the tomb, both at the time and for the Leicester Cathedral reinterment.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. […] it was announced that the remains discovered on the site of the Leicester Greyfriars were indeed those of Richard III.On this page you can see both mitochodrial DNA lines: the first by […]

    Like

  3. […] a guide price of £4 million there will be an auction of this large edifice (the Grey Friars Building) that stands right next to where the remains of Richard III were found. The auction is to be on […]

    Like

  4. […] she has now discovered Henry I, and guess what? He too is under a car park. In his case it isn’t Greyfriars but the much grander Reading Abbey….albeit in a part that is now the car park of Reading […]

    Like

  5. […] that an unidentified medieval stone sarcophagus containing a lead coffin was discovered close to Richard’s last resting place in Leicester. And, probably, that it proved to be that of an elderly […]

    Like

  6. […] which desert island had the author been marooned, may I ask? In September 2012 Richard was found at Greyfriars (where he’d been buried since 1485!) and then he was reinterred at Leicester Cathedral on 26 […]

    Like

Leave a reply to Ten years ago today … – murreyandblue Cancel reply