This article from the Telegraph is great and kinda hilariously amusing to me – archaeologists are saying that the site of where we think the Battle of Bosworth happened – well, apparently it’s located in the wrong spot!
It is currently located in Ambion Hill in Leicestershire, but archaeologists thinks it may actually be a mile away.
Excerpt:
“The revelation could prove an embarrassment for Leicestershire County Council, which built an award-winning interactive visitor centre at Ambion Hill, near the village of Market Bosworth.
It attracts thousands of visitors each year and the council has always believed it marks the spot where, in 1485, Richard III lost his life and his crown to Henry Tudor. It signalled the end of the Plantagenet dynasty and Henry VII took the throne.
However, Richard Knox, curator of Bosworth Battlefield, said it was now likely that the proper site was on low-lying ground between the villages of Shenton, Stoke Golding and Dadlington, first proposed by the historian Peter Foss in 1990.
The key to the mystery is likely to be finding the former marshland that Henry is said to have used to his advantage to attack the vastly larger army of his enemy from the flanks.
Investigations there have found ancient names given to the area such as Fenn Hole and Fenn Meadow, and a team is currently scouring the area with metal detectors.”
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