Opening the Medieval Stone Coffin Found at the Richard III Burial Site

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • www.le.ac.uk/
    University of Leicester Archaeologists open the mysterious lead coffin found buried just feet from the former grave of King Richard III. The coffin was discovered in in August 2013 - one year after the remains of the former King of England were unearthed.
    Inside the lead coffin archaeologists found the skeleton of an elderly woman, who academics believe could have been an early benefactor of the friary - as radiocarbon dating shows she might have been buried not long after the church was completed in 1250 (although analysis shows her death could have taken place as late as 1400).
    The high status female was in one of 10 graves discovered in the grounds of the medieval complex, including that of Richard III, six of which were left undisturbed. Those that were examined were all found to have female remains.
    This film was produced by External Relations, University of Leicester.
    Filmed & Edited by Carl Vivian

Комментарии • 3,1 тыс.

  • @MarsFKA
    @MarsFKA 4 года назад +1153

    Any time I am snarled up in rush hour traffic and spending most of the time at a complete stop I try to put it into perspective by reminding myself that it took Richard III five hundred years just to get out of the car park.

  • @shutupandpick740
    @shutupandpick740 5 лет назад +4280

    I just love these unboxing videos!

  • @JasonJason210
    @JasonJason210 4 года назад +372

    Britain is like that. Layers of history. Wherever you dig you find things. Bones, bits of pottery, battlefields, Roman ruins. I've always felt that in the night, the countryside is quite haunted by all this, charged with a mystery as if the past events have left a presence that can be felt.

    • @ryanmortimer9849
      @ryanmortimer9849 3 года назад +4

      you should watch Detectorists

    • @gerardcollins80
      @gerardcollins80 3 года назад +2

      *Deep*

    • @JohnSmith-pd1fz
      @JohnSmith-pd1fz 3 года назад +20

      ++JasonJason210++ Yea, I live in a small market town in Lincolnshire which today is mostly Georgian and Victorian buildings with one or two late mediaeval bits and pieces, all sitting on what was a Viking settlement which in turn has Bronze age and Neolithic remains under it. There are a few buildings dating from the 1920's and 1960's but nothing newer than that. It's a typical English country town, nothing special, and yet...

    • @johnscarr70
      @johnscarr70 3 года назад +5

      I live in the neighborhood where Richard's dad met his slightly more undignified end and yes, it's all under our feet. Roman kilns just discovered a couple of miles away. I agree, but I felt really unsettled passing by the flattened site of an old Butlins holiday camp, it definitely had a presence. It doesn't have to be ancient to still have ... Something!

    • @JohnSmith-pd1fz
      @JohnSmith-pd1fz 3 года назад

      ++@Monkey D Luffy++ To whom is your rude comment addressed mate? I for one can't tell.

  • @katesdad0
    @katesdad0 5 лет назад +1963

    Interesting, 'high status', buried in a prominent place in the church, and yet who she was is lost in time. Salutatory lesson for those who think they're more important than they are. Despite monuments to our greatness, eventually, we're all forgotten.

    • @truthray2885
      @truthray2885 5 лет назад +68

      Just before this, I was looking at a clip of celebrities buried without markers, and in unknown graves. Surprisingly prominent figures. They had the right idea. All of this is vanity, or comfort for people who will also be gone not at all long after the present deceased. For the right idea of what the inevitable future holds, maybe without the aliens, check out the end of "AI", where the boy robot gets sunk with the Blue Fairy, and eons pass. One day, the world will be a broken, lifeless chunk of rock and ice careening through space. Why pretend otherwise?

    • @joet840
      @joet840 5 лет назад +32

      We all have a limited time of conciousness to view the world we live in,then it's over.

    • @byrnejr
      @byrnejr 5 лет назад +41

      You are here. You did what you did. Then you die. Live your life in the hearts of the people you left behind.

    • @shakespeare_hall4788
      @shakespeare_hall4788 5 лет назад +54

      Aren't you just a little ray of Sunshine ???

    • @katesdad0
      @katesdad0 5 лет назад +15

      @@shakespeare_hall4788 Nothing much very cheery about a 650 year old death now is there?

  • @m.a.sanderson5016
    @m.a.sanderson5016 Год назад +148

    Saw Shakespeare's R III at Stratford (Ontario) last week. The play had a preamble with the opening of the coffin by U of Leicester anthropologists. The modern day disappeared in a flash and the play began with Richard stepping out of the grave. As a special effect, it was amazing!

    • @Matthew-ut6ed
      @Matthew-ut6ed Год назад +6

      Great idea!

    • @aileen694
      @aileen694 Год назад +8

      Wow! That must've been quite a surprise...Stratford is a wonderful theatre presence.

    • @imisstoronto3121
      @imisstoronto3121 Год назад +6

      Oh lucky you!! I've not been there for decades but I remember it very well!!! What a treat.

    • @bahoonies
      @bahoonies Год назад +4

      @M. A. sanderson Lucky you. What a brilliant piece of theatre. I've visited Shakespeare's grave in Holy Trinity church, Stratford-upon-Avon. Alas the great bard didn't rise on that occasion.

    • @MrDeedoyle
      @MrDeedoyle Год назад +2

      Poor old Shakespeare sometimes ,,, writing his great works ... under such weird politics. Elizabeth 1 supported him and She is underestimated as bringing some kind of religious tolerance. Just need to study how after Richard the throne passed

  • @tebethful
    @tebethful 4 года назад +245

    Couldn’t have said more depressing and disheartening words “ The skeleton will always remain anonymous.” 😭

    • @filmjarvis81
      @filmjarvis81 4 года назад +6

      I feel you...These kind of thoughts always give me the spleen...

    • @LndnJazzHour
      @LndnJazzHour 4 года назад +2

      Yea, very negative. And how would he know for certain anyhow?

    • @bocrews585
      @bocrews585 4 года назад

      Stacey Padgett videos of her nude or pictured

    • @bobrussell3602
      @bobrussell3602 4 года назад +5

      December Hedrick Why is that depressing ? She may have valued privacy, in which case she will always have it.

    • @srccde
      @srccde 4 года назад +19

      But that's the very fate of everyone (who actually leaves bones behind), you know. Eventually, no matter who you were in life, you will be forgotten and who or whatever finds and opens your grave, they will not know what they found, even if you had been the emperor of the world. And if you wait long enough, there isn't even going to be anything left of you to find.

  • @yavehsuarez9392
    @yavehsuarez9392 5 лет назад +1154

    I love how angry some people are at the archeologists for digging up ancient remains , I mean it's not like that's their job or anything .

    • @snigie1
      @snigie1 5 лет назад +96

      Just don't forget that's someone's daughter /wife, just think of it as your kids coffin and people talking excitedly as they poke at their dead body

    • @yavehsuarez9392
      @yavehsuarez9392 5 лет назад +121

      @@snigie1 If my body and the bodies of my family get dug up thousands of years from now in not gona be mad , if someone digs my grandmas bodie up a few decades from now or maybe a few centuries from now then yeah that's fucked up , but thousands of years no .

    • @yavehsuarez9392
      @yavehsuarez9392 5 лет назад +10

      @Cumberpatch Fingerbottom is that what you like to do fingerbottom

    • @kamimikuta4929
      @kamimikuta4929 5 лет назад +87

      @noah lawrence how? It's important in regards to history.

    • @candicehoneycutt4318
      @candicehoneycutt4318 5 лет назад +31

      Yaveh Suarez What's the difference between a few centuries and a thousand years? It's not like any of your immediate family would be alive to care.

  • @janach1305
    @janach1305 Год назад +74

    I especially noted the cloth and the cord. Finding intact textiles is always rare in archaeology.

  • @rhyfelwrDuw
    @rhyfelwrDuw 3 года назад +25

    When I was a kid I was digging in my parent's garden and I found some beautiful golden jewellery from the Victorian era - my dad sold it though so I haven't got it now - hey ho! I became interested in archaeology! Saw a friend today who is an archaeologist and was telling him about wanting to be one when I was a kid and he replied -"you then saw sense and didn't become one!" Lol! I'm sure he loves his job really!

  • @thefourcorners6306
    @thefourcorners6306 4 года назад +105

    Seeing that smile of the archeologist talking about it meant he is happy with his job 😊

    • @williammoses6232
      @williammoses6232 4 года назад +3

      it means he's a satisfied grave robber archeology is nothing just a cover for grave robbing

    • @bluesky2195
      @bluesky2195 Год назад

      @@williammoses6232 Still archeology. Also, its not grave robbing because they arent stealing anything dipshit.

    • @ClassicChlorine
      @ClassicChlorine День назад

      @@williammoses6232 womp

  • @mollyleonard942
    @mollyleonard942 9 лет назад +455

    Love the "Excavate!" shirt with the dalek... very clever

  • @Mike649foxx
    @Mike649foxx 3 года назад +90

    Maybe I’m a little weird, but the thought of someone digging up my skeleton in 500 years time and examining it, actually appeals to me. I’d love to think that I could actually do something interesting for our species with my life, or death as the case may be.

    • @dustyclark3987
      @dustyclark3987 Год назад +1

      Creamation the way to do it

    • @bstuart8186
      @bstuart8186 Год назад +4

      I sincerely hope you get your wish. Good luck champ!

    • @Mike649foxx
      @Mike649foxx Год назад +3

      @@bstuart8186 Very kind of you sir.

    • @madnessintomagic
      @madnessintomagic Год назад +5

      I want to pre-scratch a funny message on the inside of my coffin/crypt, so they have something to find besides my bones.

    • @rarity9788
      @rarity9788 Год назад +1

      The way society is now, they’re more likely to find implants, and all manner of self mutilations that we currently call “plastic surgery” lol

  • @rickracedog3838
    @rickracedog3838 6 лет назад +888

    How long do you have to wait before grave robbing turns into archaeology? Asking for a friend...

    • @philipwilliams7947
      @philipwilliams7947 5 лет назад +46

      How it is done, during construction. They find a coffin, they remove it. Then rebury it at a proper cemetery. Thats what your friend told me.

    • @ri_frontiersman2048
      @ri_frontiersman2048 5 лет назад +76

      Rick Racedog I’m not telling you again, grandma is off limits

    • @MM0SDK
      @MM0SDK 5 лет назад +16

      At least 10 minutes into Rigor Mortis.

    • @jgunther3398
      @jgunther3398 5 лет назад +18

      It stays grave robbing.

    • @jgunther3398
      @jgunther3398 5 лет назад +26

      @Dave C I'd be more inclined to agree if no money was made from it, and the bones went back in the ground. Academic career advancement, attracting paying students. No doubt several layers of people made a profit off this very movie.

  • @cynthiabroyles4890
    @cynthiabroyles4890 5 лет назад +14

    Don't go into archeology my mother said, you'll never make a living at it. Thanks Mom, I've watched these wonderful finds from afar all my life. Thanks so much for sharing. Just wonderful!

    • @CLASSICALFAN100
      @CLASSICALFAN100 3 года назад +3

      Same as anthropology, environmental science & English Lit. Zero jobs...

  • @ddubentertainment7594
    @ddubentertainment7594 4 года назад +579

    Imagine being a spirit and watching people separate your bones and put them in Ziploc bags lmao 😂 😂 🤦🏿‍♂️ 🤷🏿‍♂️

    • @theboringintoxicatedgamer1933
      @theboringintoxicatedgamer1933 4 года назад +20

      king ofhearts Get a ghost group together and play guess who

    • @CurtisD01
      @CurtisD01 4 года назад +5

      @Thomas Olson they're fucking archeologists

    • @awilk418
      @awilk418 4 года назад +17

      Thomas Olson I would be stoked if I was a spirit watching a team of archeologists find my bones and be interested in me and my life centuries after the last memories of me had faded away. They can do what they like with the body, I’m not using it anymore.

    • @amythechocoholic5761
      @amythechocoholic5761 4 года назад +10

      As a long-time paleoanthropology nut, this sitch is a dream come true. I want someone to dig me up in a thousand years, wonder what kind of life I led, wondered what I looked like, and put my bones through every test they had available trying to find out the answers.
      Also, a facial reconstruction because those are badass.

    • @ainerobertson78
      @ainerobertson78 4 года назад +10

      @FlappableBean Think about it this way, you're a person whose been completly forgotten about for ages & suddenly you've been rediscovered by scholars who treat your body with reverence & want to know everything about you. It's even better if you think about the peasant remains we've found bc they had such hard lives & here we are treating their bodies like royalty bc they could have invaluable information for us! I'd be honored if that happened to my body

  • @dereckllacuna7495
    @dereckllacuna7495 5 лет назад +407

    Wow if Seth Rogan actually put his mind into it he can actually do great things! Good one Seth!

    • @jimbob5013
      @jimbob5013 4 года назад +3

      Too bad he's a Chester.

    • @johntr76
      @johntr76 4 года назад +2

      You mean Mark Zuckerberg

    • @gallumsgorner6185
      @gallumsgorner6185 4 года назад +3

      That looks nothing like Seth Rogan.

    • @ashleybonanno3043
      @ashleybonanno3043 3 года назад +1

      I was thinking the same thing!!🤣😂

    • @iasimov5960
      @iasimov5960 3 года назад +1

      I thought it was Peter Sellers.

  • @Sabrina-rn9dn
    @Sabrina-rn9dn 5 лет назад +357

    Her teeth look great. An as soon as I saw them I was thinking around the 13 to 14 hundreds. Once sugar became available that is when people's teeth went downhill.

    • @codename495
      @codename495 5 лет назад +47

      Sabrina 1979 sugar wasn’t available outside of the Gentry until the 1800s. People had horrible teeth well before that. Coarse grinds of flour, little if any hygiene and a predominately carbohydrate diet we’re the culprits.

    • @briangoldy8784
      @briangoldy8784 4 года назад +6

      George Washington had One tooth..........an we Know.........Sugar was big in his diet.........very cool.....

    • @ernestwalden3894
      @ernestwalden3894 4 года назад +1

      Exspecialy in East kentucky lmao

    • @Gini-hl9rr
      @Gini-hl9rr 4 года назад

      You are scientist sugarist

    • @Mr_Makina
      @Mr_Makina 4 года назад +2

      @@Gini-hl9rr nah, they're just a pseudo intellectual

  • @lawrencetate145
    @lawrencetate145 Год назад +10

    The thing that blows my mind is that, in situe, there must have been grand surroundings that have simply vanished! History ran roughshod right over the the top of Richard and no one knew it. It's a miracle of modern science that this body was ever found, is it not?!

    • @jeffreysokal7264
      @jeffreysokal7264 Год назад +1

      I cringe at the use of the words "miracle of modern science". There is nothing miraculous about the scientific method. Scientific discoveries can be explained and understood.

    • @jezzaus2124
      @jezzaus2124 2 месяца назад

      King one minute, on a RUclips video the next.

  • @AvaT42
    @AvaT42 5 лет назад +36

    Fascinating. These archeologists have such patience.

    • @happycommuter3523
      @happycommuter3523 Год назад

      You have to be SO careful with bones. They are unbelievably fragile.

  • @wendyferry2967
    @wendyferry2967 5 лет назад +88

    I just love archaeology documentaries. I know this wasn’t one but, nonetheless an amazing find.

  • @davehoward22
    @davehoward22 Год назад +27

    I remember seeing a documentary on a medievel knight buried in a lead coffin about 13/14th century and when they opened it they were amazed his internal organs were still intact and actually did an autopsy with a scalpal on his soft liver and retrieved his last meal from his stomach.

    • @plymouth5714
      @plymouth5714 Год назад +2

      I remember that one - the lead coffin in that instance had remained completely sealed like preserved meat in a tin!

    • @Frankie5Angels150
      @Frankie5Angels150 Год назад +3

      Ironically, autopsy also proved he had died of lead poisoning!

    • @lisayohe1736
      @lisayohe1736 Год назад +3

      Would love to see it

    • @PortmanRd
      @PortmanRd Год назад

      Apparently his chest cavity was full of dried blood. A couple theories suggested he either died in battle or a jousting/hunting accident.

    • @mariagibson2722
      @mariagibson2722 6 месяцев назад

      My word. Amazing.

  • @annasummers5348
    @annasummers5348 5 лет назад +39

    I love the idea of someone ressurecting you and rediscovering your life after you've been long forgotten, or to learn more about a known person long after they've died. I don't get those who call this " grave robbing'.

    • @Frankie5Angels150
      @Frankie5Angels150 Год назад +1

      “Resurrecting”? I must have missed the part where “them bones them bones got up and walked around.”
      Without ascertaining a name, was anything accomplished other than robbing a grave?

    • @aussie1546
      @aussie1546 Год назад

      What happened to the part "rest in peace"

  • @harriet2501
    @harriet2501 8 лет назад +432

    This may be a naive comment, but, when opening even ancient graves, shouldn't the archaeologists wear face masks? Is there no danger of dormant bacteria or viruses being activated even after all this time? As I said, a naive question to those who know the answer, but I don't. In any case, archaeology is a fascinating profession and I always enjoy reading about the discoveries and hypotheses.

    • @GodsHelix
      @GodsHelix 7 лет назад +120

      No, not really. Any microbes and bacteria would have long since died, and any virus or infectious disease would also have long since perished.

    • @sandstorm2324
      @sandstorm2324 7 лет назад +31

      Its ideal to wear it, but they mostly dont, when it an open burial like this. If it is a tomb then yes they wear some protection.

    • @Hurricaneintheroom
      @Hurricaneintheroom 7 лет назад +120

      Not a silly question. The curse of Tututkamen's tomb when they first opened it. People died because of microbes inside the tomb. The public thought it was the curse brought to life.

    • @johngibson2884
      @johngibson2884 7 лет назад +58

      harriet2501 yes it is very dangerous they are foolish .Many deadly bacteria ....Google Cadaverine .....and that's just one . They didn't wear masks not because they don't know ....it's English bravado.But it also is dumb ... They confirm your point when they are TOLD to go to the infirmary first , to confirm " the lead did not preserve dangerous bacteria " ....which means they should not have opened it at the church .
      All around Europe and even Turkey, they are opening graves with such things as ....plague, smallpox, yellow fever . Who knows what else .

    • @biggusdickus8335
      @biggusdickus8335 7 лет назад +22

      harriet2501
      Of course not...its completely safe.... My team & I have been seeking out, and excavating tombs all around the world for almost 40 years now.

  • @robertcaffrey6097
    @robertcaffrey6097 4 года назад +16

    I would like to see a reconstruction of the face of the skeleton they found.

  • @canadiankewldude
    @canadiankewldude 5 лет назад +186

    "In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return."
    Genesis 3:19, KJV

    • @patrickbobbin9789
      @patrickbobbin9789 5 лет назад +16

      Amen

    • @bakumight4559
      @bakumight4559 4 года назад +4

      But then why use coffins don't they stop your dust from going back to the earth from which your dust came?

    • @bakumight4559
      @bakumight4559 4 года назад +1

      @Leonie H Idk if the coffins decompose or not. Just curious lol

    • @robertlaube574
      @robertlaube574 4 года назад +1

      @@bakumight4559 stone tends or at least has the ability to last forever.

    • @SmackWaterJack001
      @SmackWaterJack001 4 года назад +5

      king james was a flaming homosexual, did you know that?

  • @matthewspringer1369
    @matthewspringer1369 5 лет назад +50

    I dont think its disgraceful at all. She died and was buried... But unfortunately her tombstone was lost. Excavating this not only brought her (the person who we might think it is) story back to life, it acknowledged her existence. It told her story/history and the Archaeologist treated/handled the remains with care. They do this because they value them and are trained professionals. I actually think its kindof sweet and an honorable thing to do. I think it would be so cool if somone dug up my remains 700 years later if my tombstone disappeared. Hope I would tell a cool history. :)

    • @led_farmer
      @led_farmer 5 лет назад

      Grave robbery is still a crime

    • @matthewspringer1369
      @matthewspringer1369 5 лет назад +7

      @@led_farmer No shit. Archeologist preserve and save finds like this... These people have YEARS of study and experience in specialized fields to handle situations like this. They are NOT grave robbers, rather the complete opposite... They don't steal artifacts or treasures and sell them, they don't desecrate bodies or throw then aside. Again they are not grave robbers and it totally legal for them... Why??? Because they're accredited and they've obtained lisenses. Not only in their degrees but also through government orders that require them to handle finds like this that are uncovered usually in construction sites...

    • @matthewspringer1369
      @matthewspringer1369 5 лет назад +7

      @@billybob042665 Ohhhhh okay... yeah so lets just destroy the grave and make way for the new parking lot of a wal-mart... Lets just remove all remembrance of existence for this person and throw it aside... We dont need to hold any value of history or the life of this persons past... /s What are you talking about??.... this was a court order! Archaeologist are required to show up and investigate these things. Thats their job and they do this to make SURE its not criminal activity. By opening up this sarcophagus and understanding what they are looking at we found out that it wasn't a disposed murder victim and we gathered valuable data of the past. They were even able to put a name to this person for the cherry on top. You have not idea what goes into requiring access to dig-sites and if you think this is morally wrong... i dont know what to tell you... This is NOT grave robbery. lol

    • @AverageAlien
      @AverageAlien 5 лет назад

      @@billybob042665 immoral, fuck off, theres no such thing, feed the bones to some stray dogs, they'll be more useful that way at least

    • @why3011
      @why3011 5 лет назад

      @@AverageAlien lol you're so edgy bro

  • @gisselleortiz533
    @gisselleortiz533 4 года назад +200

    One day one of these people are gonna dig up a deadly plague

    • @williammoses6232
      @williammoses6232 4 года назад +8

      oooohhhh one can only hope

    • @codgertodger
      @codgertodger 4 года назад +43

      The plague bacteria cannot survive without a host. The bacteria die, along with the person itvinfected, usually within hours.

    • @truanashabadapressure6621
      @truanashabadapressure6621 4 года назад +28

      Don’t need it we got the Chinese government to spread plagues now unfortunately

    • @debbeprice5458
      @debbeprice5458 4 года назад +3

      Maybe they did!

    • @imanjadwat5704
      @imanjadwat5704 4 года назад +14

      @@williammoses6232 this didn't age well...

  • @russhurst6730
    @russhurst6730 5 лет назад +13

    This has to be some of the most interesting work/careers one could do if in the proper locations for such unique discoveries. Had I not been plagued with a mild case of OCD that would make digging in dirt a literal nightmare I could see myself loving to be part of these crews that excavate ancient relics and historical treasures.

    • @CLASSICALFAN100
      @CLASSICALFAN100 3 года назад +4

      Alas, most people have a mild case of MAL (making a living)...lol

    • @prussianowl233
      @prussianowl233 2 года назад +1

      OCD is the worst

    • @buffoonustroglodytus4688
      @buffoonustroglodytus4688 Год назад +1

      Yeah it’s a great job to have IF you find something cool. Most of the time you’re just digging up dirt unfortunately.

  • @shirleyk.f.6568
    @shirleyk.f.6568 6 лет назад +14

    What I do not get is WHY everyone thinks it is OK to dig up graves or tombs. I do not care how old they are, it is still a resting place for someone. Info is not that important that you do crap like that. How would you like someone to dig up your parents or children after they are put to rest.

    • @LutzDerLurch
      @LutzDerLurch 6 лет назад +4

      If we were to bury everyone in the ground and never ever touch anyone ever again, we would have run out of space on the surface of the earth centuries ago.

    • @HobbyOrganist
      @HobbyOrganist 5 лет назад

      They aren't "resting" Jim, they are *DEAD* and the worms and decay did plenty of "unresting" on it all

  • @unapologetic5150
    @unapologetic5150 Год назад +1

    That's why cremation is more respectful you don't have to worry that someone will disrespect your mortal remains .

  • @pepsiforever1
    @pepsiforever1 5 лет назад +8

    I love that the guy says the lid is cracking and proceeds to kneel and walk on it!!

  • @tungstenkid2271
    @tungstenkid2271 5 лет назад +4

    Call me over-sensitive but I wish archaeologists would say a few respectful words when they unearth old bones such as "Forgive us for disturbing your rest", instead of just plonking the bones in a box and carting them off..

    • @colinjoseph3742
      @colinjoseph3742 5 лет назад

      Im sure that would make all the difference

  • @diesel8447
    @diesel8447 4 года назад +19

    Seams like somebody went to a good length to keep this sealed...

  • @pearlcaster8287
    @pearlcaster8287 6 лет назад +329

    "See what was inside it?" What did you expect? A Happy Meal?

    • @britnic5394
      @britnic5394 6 лет назад +2

      bullion .... plenty of it about in those times aswell.... best start digging up shit loads of graves... wheres my shovel?

    • @joycegentile8552
      @joycegentile8552 6 лет назад +22

      LoL a 15 century Happy meal!...leg of mutton ,flask of mead and a sack of oats?

    • @duaneantor9157
      @duaneantor9157 5 лет назад +1

      Lol a happy meal.

    • @tinaloflin1174
      @tinaloflin1174 5 лет назад +1

      But it's fascinating. I'm dying to know what important female was buried in such an elaborate way!! They already ruled out Eleanor of Aquitaine, one of my heroes.

    • @TheKonga88
      @TheKonga88 5 лет назад +1

      @@tinaloflin1174 It was Cilla Black.. 😂😂😂🙌🙌🙌🙌👽💀

  • @stevensardinta93
    @stevensardinta93 4 года назад +6

    At what point does it cross the line from desecrating a grave, basically grave robbing, to an archeological study? The dead have an inherent right to rest in peace and not be disturbed.

    • @MegaBrokenstar
      @MegaBrokenstar 2 года назад +2

      That line was long ago crossed when Henry VIII had this woman’s gravesite demolished, razed, and abandoned. He is responsible for her disturbance, not this team of archaeologists who are removing her from underneath a parking lot.

    • @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo
      @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo Год назад +1

      you do not understand what you are talking about. The idea that a grave is something for eternity and should not be disturbed is only a modern concept. before the victorian era graves were moved around all the time and graves were never permanent. people were buried in rather shallow graves for a certain amount of years. then they were exhumed and their bones were put in a charnel house or osuary pit. and their grave was being re-used There is NOTHING immoral about opening a grave.

    • @stevensardinta93
      @stevensardinta93 Год назад

      @@Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo , then how do you explain the permenant graves of egyptians in pyramids over 2000 years ago? Or the bible stating Adam was buried in secret in a cave so no one could disturb his grave? Perhaps it is you who doesn't understand what they are talking about.

  • @thewastedgamer935
    @thewastedgamer935 3 года назад +7

    I just can’t understand why you would remove the coffin, what’s in it? A person who wanted to be buried and left alone maybe? In a couple hundred years I know I wouldn’t want to be removed from where ever my supposed ‘final resting place’ was so why would you do it to someone else just because you’re ‘curious’?

    • @bradtruscott1510
      @bradtruscott1510 3 года назад +3

      What does it matter? They’re dead. Like dead dead. Almost 1000 years dead. No living relatives for 100s of years.

    • @thewastedgamer935
      @thewastedgamer935 3 года назад +1

      @@bradtruscott1510
      Yeh but like they weren’t buried like that wanting to be dug up after a while

  • @Chalky.
    @Chalky. 5 лет назад +6

    Says the weight of the lid is destroying it after an archaeologist gets in the hole and puts all his weight on top of it.

  • @MySpace662
    @MySpace662 3 года назад +9

    You just opened the grave of Count Dracula's blood line, may you all rest in peace.

  • @Hristiyan1991
    @Hristiyan1991 4 года назад +9

    " His teeth are yellow, because he didn't use the Colgate super white! Avaliable in the super markets! "

  • @outb4thecount
    @outb4thecount 9 лет назад +194

    Always wanted to be an archaeologist.

    • @paulajewitt2012
      @paulajewitt2012 6 лет назад +1

      Deborah Robinson youll have to be an actor first.dont believe me,wellaware1 on youtube and educate yourself on the bullshit.

    • @iamtenzin4409
      @iamtenzin4409 6 лет назад +11

      You're not dead yet, are you? The first thing you must have is an intense sense of curiosity. And don't think you're going to get rich off this either. It's hard work and takes years of training. Is there a particular time period or people you're interested in?

    • @Ginny855
      @Ginny855 6 лет назад +18

      Your comment is 2 years old. What are you doing now? :) I worked in the archaeology for one year (voluntary social year) and I can say: It is awsome! It's true, that it is hard work, it's physically demanding and you must not have a problem with human remains (especially children and babies aren't that easy to handle) and becoming dirty, because most discoveries are made in latrine pits, which are still yellow and often still smell (after hundreds of years)... but if you are willing to do that kind of work, you will find a truly magnificent profession! You can "live" and touch history and see things people, people haven't seen for a very long time!
      But many archaeologists don't work outside but research in a museum etc. Still very interesting!

    • @iamtenzin4409
      @iamtenzin4409 6 лет назад +3

      Ginny855 - In this portion of the US, a lot of their time is spent in and around constructions sites. Making sure that any remains or artifacts found aren't Native, but rather settlers. The latter usually allows construction to proceed after collecting, recording, and cataloging. The former? Well, that's a whole other world of fun altogether. I'm told there are a lot of antiquities and tribal laws that come into play there. And after Kennewick Man, I'm glad archeology is not my profession.

    • @Ginny855
      @Ginny855 6 лет назад +4

      IamTenzin Here in Germany most of our archaeological activities are on construction sites, too

  • @k.s.333
    @k.s.333 5 лет назад +102

    A: so what do you see in your crystal ball
    B: 600 years from now your grave will be discovered and some guy wearing a t-shirt with the word "mu-ha-ha-ha" will look upon your bones.
    A: wut?

  • @poppyfoutoulis198
    @poppyfoutoulis198 Год назад +1

    If it wasn't for the persistence of that amatuer group of historians, that find would never had happened. Kudos to them.

  • @blipblip88
    @blipblip88 4 года назад +6

    A search for opening vintage WW 2 rations kits landed me here..

  • @vestaosto
    @vestaosto Год назад +6

    Would be interested to know what they have found about this woman after more research.

  • @LuLzMrTom
    @LuLzMrTom 9 лет назад +128

    2:12 that guy in the middle "I'm helping!"

    • @tomthomas9173
      @tomthomas9173 6 лет назад

      lolllllllll i didnt get while vwatching rge video until saW UR COMMENT LOLL

    • @cannedlaughter2535
      @cannedlaughter2535 6 лет назад +1

      He probably didn't have a PhD so he doesn't count. (jk)

    • @williamellis6176
      @williamellis6176 5 лет назад +9

      probably actually was helping making sure the stone didn't snap in half

  • @jonpatterson5668
    @jonpatterson5668 6 лет назад +4

    So much for resting in peace

    • @morrisjensen1959
      @morrisjensen1959 Год назад

      Who wants to RIP, when I die I want to go off and explore the universe!

  • @BallymurphyBabe
    @BallymurphyBabe 4 года назад +6

    As much as it is interesting and fascinating, I feel that it’s disrespectful to disturb the remains. This person who was once buried at peace has now been dismantled and put in different boxes. Maybe in another 500 years people will be digging us up and studying us.

    • @BallymurphyBabe
      @BallymurphyBabe 4 года назад

      Robert Stallard the comment wasn’t about burial or cremation it was about disturbing someone once they have been buried. In regards to cemeteries, the plots of land have been allotted hundreds of years ago and do not widen to allow more people. So I don’t see where it is selfish. But then that’s a completely different topic for discussion.

    • @Whom1337
      @Whom1337 2 года назад

      @Robert Stallard yeah we should demolish every single pyramid in egypt for taking up space

    • @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo
      @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo Год назад

      you do not understand what you are talking about. The idea that a grave is something for eternity and should not be disturbed is only a modern concept. before the victorian era graves were moved around all the time and graves were never permanent. people were buried in rather shallow graves for a certain amount of years. then they were exhumed and their bones were put in a charnel house or osuary pit. and their grave was being re-used There is NOTHING immoral about opening a grave.

    • @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo
      @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo Год назад

      @@BallymurphyBabe graves sites were NEVER personal property. this is a modern 20th century concept undertakers like to make their customers believe to squeeze more money out of them.

    • @zepp3793
      @zepp3793 Год назад

      @@Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo it’s not their choice to “dig” them up. Companies come over and want to basically add a building on top of the burial site so archaeologists are called in to make sure the remains aren’t destroyed. Don’t blame the archaeologists, blame the companies that want to add their business

  • @MrTheSmokinman
    @MrTheSmokinman 4 года назад +7

    It didn't really hit me until 2:04 and I didn't expect to be "triggered" as they call it but to see them take a body out of it's resting place just hit me as being disrespectful. I mean he/she didn't agree to this and it probably went against everything spiritual they believed in at that point in time, not to mention the money and work put in for that service. I could see moving all these bodies to a new resting place but to take them out, wrap their body parts individually in a zip lock bag and store them away like some dinosaur bones to me seems disrespectful and probably against their wishes being that people back then were way more religious than we are today. These bones belong in the ground, not to some archeologist or museum.

    • @tubatoucan
      @tubatoucan 3 года назад

      It's literally their job. And the remains where in a construction site. What are the gonna do? Build around the coffin?

  • @bevyking6570
    @bevyking6570 3 года назад +6

    Although I understand the interest, I don't understand why it is okay to open someone's coffin no matter how old it is. It just doesn't seem right to me. But here I am sitting here watching it?!?

  • @Loribethdi
    @Loribethdi 4 года назад +2

    Led caskets were used when someone dies farther away and needs to be shipped back home so I wouldn't rule that one lady out so quickly...

    • @Godwinpounds4333
      @Godwinpounds4333 Год назад

      Hello how are you doing?

    • @Loribethdi
      @Loribethdi Год назад

      @@Godwinpounds4333not too great at the moment. You?

  • @IMChrysalis
    @IMChrysalis 5 лет назад +36

    What about using forensic artists to recreate her face, guys? That would be fascinating to see!

    • @SamLizziesmom
      @SamLizziesmom 5 лет назад +1

      That's what i was saying

    • @IMChrysalis
      @IMChrysalis 5 лет назад +3

      @Adam Malec seriously, a lot more than opinion. Forensic artists help solve crimes.
      There is a sample of her hair. And if there is enough of the skull intact, there are markers on the bone for a lot of the rest, where tendons were connected and so on
      ... they know about her diet from the analysis of the bone and teeth. Forensics is a scientific area of study, one that is accurate enough to solve crimes.
      We may never be able to identify which patron she was because there are no known portraits. We may never know why she was buried with a king...
      but we really can get a glimpse at the past.

    • @CurtisD01
      @CurtisD01 5 лет назад

      @Adam Malec Don't talk about stuff you don't know about... you legit know nothing about what goes into Forensic reconstruction

    • @trotptkabasnbi6655
      @trotptkabasnbi6655 5 лет назад

      The bones were divided up and went to private collectors and. The black market

  • @joepalooka2145
    @joepalooka2145 5 лет назад +5

    Not enough discussion about the lead shroud. That is truly amazing. Where would that have come from? It's very large, and thick enough to need cutting with shears. What about the soldering? This is an extremely valuable and interesting piece of medieval metal work and metallurgy.

    • @spencerwilton5831
      @spencerwilton5831 5 лет назад +2

      Joe Palooka Lead has been in common use for millennia. It was one of the forest widely used metals. Lead work would have been familiar to any medieval metalworker, it was used for tanks and cisterns, and of course for roofing on high status buildings. It's easy to work with because of the low melting point and easily formed into sheets. There is nothing particularly remarkable about this coffin liner.

  • @john-ob7bv
    @john-ob7bv 2 года назад +2

    Leave them alone

  • @juanitarichards1074
    @juanitarichards1074 5 лет назад +33

    I think the dead in these cases wouldn't mind being found and they'd be fascinated if they knew of the advances in understanding and research into how and why they died, how long they had lain there, and remembrance of times past - their time. They are not forgotten after all and their skeletons can tell us many things.

    • @eileenhetherington3704
      @eileenhetherington3704 Год назад +1

      How do you know? It is a crime in most parts of the world to desecrate a grave, but scientists and archeologists get a free pass? It's wrong.

    • @juanitarichards1074
      @juanitarichards1074 Год назад +3

      @@eileenhetherington3704 So why are you watching? So you can sit back and criticize?

    • @maturin1919
      @maturin1919 Год назад +1

      ​@@eileenhetherington3704I assure you the dead do not care. They're dead.

  • @momof2momof2
    @momof2momof2 5 лет назад +54

    I am always caught between being very interested in this kind of subject, and feeling that its just wrong to do this.

    • @Myffy
      @Myffy 4 года назад +10

      Me Too!. People shouldn't be laid to rest then dug up like potatoes in the name of curiosity

    • @phyllisruthmick5391
      @phyllisruthmick5391 4 года назад +2

      I agree! I know exactly how you feel because I also feel the same way!

    • @phyllisruthmick5391
      @phyllisruthmick5391 4 года назад +2

      @@Myffy You're right of course! It feels very disrespectful to do such a thing out of mere curiosity. Possibly if this sort of thing is/was done out of necessity for preserving an ancient site or because it could genuinely help in an important way then I think that I could or would be more inclined to be more accepting or more agreeable.

    • @Myffy
      @Myffy 4 года назад +5

      @@phyllisruthmick5391 I just feel like human beings should stop being so meddlesome and just leave things alone! Especially graves

    • @jandrews6254
      @jandrews6254 4 года назад +1

      Amber Angel by this time,2020, anywhere you dig likely has bits of human in it. You can either go the route of dust to dust, or should you happen to believe in an actual afterlife, then the souls that once inhabited those bones have gone to live...elsewhere. If you believe in reincarnation, well then the bits we leave behind are basically just blood and bone fertiliser.

  • @vc6596
    @vc6596 4 года назад +2

    Would you want people 100s of years from now digging up your grave and opening up your coffin? I wouldnt...give the dead respect

  • @dogstylez585
    @dogstylez585 5 лет назад +179

    They should do DNA testing and find living relatives

    • @twoshedsjackson6478
      @twoshedsjackson6478 5 лет назад +16

      It would be like Henry III, there would probably be millions.

    • @jimajams7080
      @jimajams7080 5 лет назад +6

      Did you not hear what they said?

    • @Esteban-rv7ze
      @Esteban-rv7ze 5 лет назад +9

      Yes and find the true heir.

    • @kathleenmurphy2379
      @kathleenmurphy2379 4 года назад +3

      @@jimajams7080 I don't think they watch the whole video otherwise they know there were no living relatives that they knew of to the lady they suspected this body belong to or what was left of the body

    • @NicoleHeavenLewis
      @NicoleHeavenLewis 4 года назад +5

      @@kathleenmurphy2379 all it takes is one dna sample to match worldwide if using the right database. But i get what your saying. Maybe one day they will revisit this lady and see if they can find any living relatives

  • @peggynorton5145
    @peggynorton5145 4 года назад +3

    So why not extract DNA and put it in the Ancestry database to search matches and do a backward timeline of births, marriages in any matches to see what they find?

  • @WiseDelilah
    @WiseDelilah 3 года назад

    So many people complaining about the body being exhumed as if it's a modern practice to go digging around in people's burial sites. St Cuthbert's body and coffin spent a long 1200 years (687-1827) being moved around the north of England and Scotland. His coffin was frequently opened to add bits and pieces inside, or simply to comb a long-since-dead-man's hair. People have always been fascinated by the death and the dead, and people have for a long time dug up the dead and moved them around when their previous resting place no long suited the purpose. In ancient Rome, their was a mass exhumation simply because people had been buried on public land that they then turned into a public gardens.

  • @waltersantos3190
    @waltersantos3190 5 лет назад +133

    It says a lot about our modern diet when you look at the old ladies teeth or maybe she brushed twice a day with Colgate triple strip 😁

    • @rattusnorvegicus4380
      @rattusnorvegicus4380 5 лет назад +7

      Yes of course....because we all need that toxic by-product from industry, namely fluoride, that some conmen foisted upon the world to line their pockets with dosh

    • @yvettebasson1243
      @yvettebasson1243 4 года назад +10

      I wonder if it may be because sugar wasn't very common or easily available yet.

    • @mandymorrisonhamilton5941
      @mandymorrisonhamilton5941 4 года назад +6

      Brush with Coal soot!! My mum did it every morning! Im talking aboot in da 1940's , Mum has now past on, may she R.I.P. & As for her TEETH she still had everyone & the whiteness n such health gums!! I was so jealous of how health her white teeth were @ 70yrs old,? I lv & still miss u mum xxx

    • @mandymorrisonhamilton5941
      @mandymorrisonhamilton5941 4 года назад +1

      CHEERS!! TO WHOEVER LIKE MY STORY YEAH! ABOOT USING COAL SOOT!! WELL ITS NOW 2020!!! SO HAPPY NEW YR! TO EVERYONE IN & ON U=TUBE!! LV YA! STAY TRUE YEH!! MZ X frm U.K. xxx

    • @karanfield4229
      @karanfield4229 4 года назад +1

      The Egyptians used mice brains to brush theirs 🤢🦷

  • @russellscott81299
    @russellscott81299 Год назад +8

    I'm always amazed and jealous of how nice the teeth are on all these old skeletons.

    • @janebrown1706
      @janebrown1706 Год назад +3

      Before sugar was discovered.

    • @nobodysbaby5048
      @nobodysbaby5048 Год назад

      Processed sugar was very rare back then. So, yeah, a lot of people died young w good teeth.

    • @jonathanhall7903
      @jonathanhall7903 Год назад

      Read, "Breathe," by James Nestor.

    • @mrkvomiltato871
      @mrkvomiltato871 Год назад +1

      @@nobodysbaby5048 Young? They said this woman was over sixty.

  • @learnjazzmusic
    @learnjazzmusic Год назад +1

    Congrats to Philippa Langley for finding Richard III. University of Leicester should rename one of its buildings or auditoriums with her name !

  • @mjkrbjcw
    @mjkrbjcw 5 лет назад +5

    Who signs off on building over that all those years ago without keeping records?

    • @GildaLee27
      @GildaLee27 5 лет назад +3

      Aside from the ravages of time upon paper, and fire, there was this thing called the Dissolution of the Monasteries.

    • @MrISkater
      @MrISkater 3 года назад

      @@GildaLee27 the protestant heretic King Henry VIII

  • @thesaneparty4079
    @thesaneparty4079 6 лет назад +7

    If we're just going to dig everybody up and try to identify what they ate, why don't we just display people in museums when they die with a list of their favorite foods?

  • @laratheplanespotter
    @laratheplanespotter Год назад

    I met Turi King at the Royal Institute in January . It was amo. She’s so kind and so lovely

  • @jonkneeland
    @jonkneeland 4 года назад +27

    Weird how it’s ok to dig up / disturb someone’s remains when it comes to research. Anyone who digs me up will be haunted by me 100%

    • @everettconrad4685
      @everettconrad4685 3 года назад +1

      I really don't think so 100%. Are you really going to wait around in that grave just so you could haunt them? You may be waiting a long long time, maybe never get the chance to haunt someone...

  • @gerald4133
    @gerald4133 5 лет назад +4

    Wow Europe has such a grand history. I saw somewhere that George Washingtons relatives are buried in England. It would be quite a sight to see Medival days in England or France.

  • @Fubs_the_queen
    @Fubs_the_queen 4 года назад

    I understand if you find this disrespectful, but most likely this woman will have an even greater legacy from being disinterred than she ever had in life. She was forgotten to history, this way she will be remembered, and appreciated for her contribution to our understanding of her life.
    You have to realize what important work these people are doing. By looking into her bones and teeth, as well as the fragments of what she was buried with, we gain insight into what her life, and life in general, was like at the time. What diets consisted of, what materials were available, the longevity of teeth, what ailments afflicted her.... not only does this greatly impact our understanding of the past, but it allows us to become more connected to it and how we can learn from it.
    I saw a comment that archeology is a “stupid job, more of a hobby”, that may have been true a hundred years ago when people would just go into a foreign country and steal valuable objects for fun, but these men and women studied for at least a decade to receive a doctorate so that all they do is with the utmost professionalism, respect and scientific approach.
    You might fear that this could be your body or your loved ones body one day, but chances are, it won’t be. And if it is, think of all the wonderful things that will be learned about you, your time and the world, through something that will be completely inconsequential to you then.

  • @steveo4601
    @steveo4601 5 лет назад +6

    Sitting on top of it, very professional.

    • @charlieclark2609
      @charlieclark2609 5 лет назад

      You got a better way to be able to get to it at a better angle to support your weight to do that job ?

    • @steveo4601
      @steveo4601 5 лет назад

      @@charlieclark2609 a plank.

    • @charlieclark2609
      @charlieclark2609 5 лет назад

      @@steveo4601 maybe they didn't have a plank laying around. Also I highly doubt the dead person gave a shit that he had his knee propped up on his coffin. Dead bodies are dead bodies, no matter who it is. Propping your knee up on a sarcophagus isn't disrespectful. If he had opened the casket and put his knee in the chest cavity, then that would be disrespectful , just from a standpoint of you wouldn't want someone to do that to your uncle or whoever family this is

    • @steveo4601
      @steveo4601 5 лет назад

      @@charlieclark2609 , well I'm out of lumber answers,😁

  • @RuffStuff420
    @RuffStuff420 Год назад +3

    So like, your not going to learn anything from this person, is there a reason not to reinter them? It's just kinda the right thing to do isn't it?

  • @DH-pz7bc
    @DH-pz7bc Год назад

    I’ve always been so fascinated with Archaeology.

  • @MrTM-fg6zn
    @MrTM-fg6zn 4 года назад +6

    Next on "Who's under the car park"

  • @Burnersforvanlife
    @Burnersforvanlife 5 лет назад +12

    We took it to the infirmary and realised the occupant was in fact beyond resuscitation.

  • @MamaTDawgx3
    @MamaTDawgx3 4 года назад +5

    Why would anyone even think to do such things to remains is beyond me. 😕 😔 The fact that you disturbed a resting casket for anything is upsurd and shocking

    • @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo
      @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo Год назад

      you do not understand what you are talking about. The idea that a grave is something for eternity and should not be disturbed is only a modern concept. before the victorian era graves were moved around all the time and graves were never permanent. people were buried in rather shallow graves for a certain amount of years. then they were exhumed and their bones were put in a charnel house or osuary pit. and their grave was being re-used There is NOTHING immoral about opening a grave.

    • @MamaTDawgx3
      @MamaTDawgx3 Год назад

      @gretchenthunberg5510 in ancient times. This is the 21st century and it's uncommon. But, yes back in the world days that was just one of the many horrible things done to the dead.

    • @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo
      @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo Год назад

      @@MamaTDawgx3 STOP IT! you cannot apply modernist principles to people and society in the past. They looked at things in a different way. and they did NOT do horrible things to the dead. exhuming a decomposed body and placing the remains in the charnel house was done with the utmost respect and reference. As can be seen how neatly the bones are stacked. and how they went to great lenghts to design and build beautiful charnel houses and sayd masses on an almost non stop basis for the dead.
      Furthermore you fail to mention the fact that this practise is still done to this day. In Greece where the ground is very rocky and where there is hardly any space to bury the dead they also exhume decomposed bodies and put the remains in ossuaries or charnel houses or pits. especiall on small greek islands. this is also the common practise in almost all Orthodox monasteries.
      It is evident that you dont actualy know what you are talking about.
      Talking about doing horrible things to the dead .....pls do tell us how us modern day people find it ok that aborted babies are chopped up, used in grim medical experiments and being dumped in garbage bins. Please do explain to us how and why this is not horrible and immoral?

    • @MamaTDawgx3
      @MamaTDawgx3 Год назад

      @gretchenthunberg5510 going off on a tangent, Gretchen. Think what you went into. Abortions have nothing to do with the deceased. YOU STOP. I think you have tried to make this about YOU, YOU'RE BELIEFS. I only mentioned the fact. I didn't go off on a tangent about abortions. Now if you would like me to school you in abortion I can speaking 50 years on this earth with children. I feel it's a disgrace to bring up abortion when we are clearly speaking of the deceased 😔

    • @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo
      @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo Год назад

      @@MamaTDawgx3 You have no idea what you are tlaking about. and do not have an idea about the burial practises of our ancestors. Go read a book or something. You might learn a thing or two. You are simply incorrect and i called you out for it. Now you ar throwing a hissy fit like a improperly raised teenage child.
      Go boil your head.

  • @Gearz86
    @Gearz86 6 лет назад +4

    It's funny that once a certain amount of time has passed, people are allowed to desecrate your grave lol

    • @Zuxiasunicorn
      @Zuxiasunicorn 3 года назад

      They have to be moved regardless. If they can figure out who it is, it can be moved to an appropriate place. Me, I'd appreciate being moved from underneath a parking lot. If somebody wants to take a peek at my remains, fine, I'm not using them. But rebury someplace dignified.

  • @parkerirwin2312
    @parkerirwin2312 4 года назад +2

    Imagine getting buried just to be dug up centuries later

  • @americanpsychoedit4554
    @americanpsychoedit4554 4 года назад +4

    It was 11:50 PM and I was wondering how does a person in a coffin looks like 50 years later... Then I found this video! Lol

  • @infinitepower6780
    @infinitepower6780 3 года назад +3

    "carefully dismantle"
    *throws stone parts onto ground
    **sees chips crack and flake off

  • @marlenalinne6100
    @marlenalinne6100 Год назад +1

    She's been all tucked in and comfy for the last six or seven centuries and you dug her up and dumped her in a bag. What was the point?

  • @MilesB1975
    @MilesB1975 4 года назад +5

    I laughed at them deciding to take the skeleton to the Infirmary, just in case.
    "I'm not dead!"
    "Go to the Sick-Bay and Matron will give you some Aspirin..."

  • @arthurseymorejr.3606
    @arthurseymorejr.3606 3 года назад +7

    Amazing how the body of a King could be lost over time .

    • @lindamerchant4431
      @lindamerchant4431 Год назад

      Being the dark king Richard the 3rd was the 2 tower princes found remains

  • @ray.shoesmith
    @ray.shoesmith Год назад +1

    "without knowing what's inside it"
    My dude, it's a coffin.....

  • @soran27
    @soran27 5 лет назад +13

    they didnt use hair nets when sifting thru the coffin debris?

    • @kmp8985
      @kmp8985 5 лет назад

      Or face masks !

  • @maxpayne2574
    @maxpayne2574 5 лет назад +10

    Gee all you folks that are worried about them digging up 600 year old bones. Whens the last time you talked to your living family.

  • @MostlyCastles
    @MostlyCastles 4 года назад +1

    Amazing that they can tell what her diet was like. Fascinating stuff.

  • @Kittygh
    @Kittygh 5 лет назад +4

    Love the Dr Who reference on his T shirt.

  • @tightywhitey6466
    @tightywhitey6466 5 лет назад +5

    Sealed led coffin to prevent gases from escaping, while the body of Eleanor Countess Elester is transported from France to London.

  • @cosmicinsane516
    @cosmicinsane516 Год назад +2

    I’ve always wondered exactly how many years have to pass before defiling graves becomes archeology.

    • @dollywilson3395
      @dollywilson3395 Год назад

      It still seems so disrespectful to me.

    • @jabber1990
      @jabber1990 Год назад

      I believe they focus on intent, its not grave robbery if its archeology

  • @3Danful
    @3Danful 6 лет назад +32

    Just think. you might be excavated in a few hundred years, and have your bones placed in separate plastic bags, and end up in a draw somewhere in a museum. maybe to be put together again to be gorped at in a museum gallery.
    I have to say. there are some things in excavation, i think is best left alone. go ahead and verify "who" it is, and identify his/her belongings, but i personally think its disrespectful to be effectively disgarding someone of their resting place. I dont think any of us would want any of our parents/grandparents being disturbed, would you?!!

    • @halliehurst4847
      @halliehurst4847 6 лет назад +12

      I kind of get your point but that actually sounds kind of cool to me? I mean I’m going to be dead I’m not going to care either way but in this case given the choice between being under a car park or in a museum after being studied so I can give people insight into the time I lived in I’d go for the second option. In fact I’d go for the second option over being left in peace because how many people get to be useful after they’re dead? I guess it’s just personal preference.

    • @piusais721
      @piusais721 6 лет назад

      Where is she now???

    • @carleymarieb5436
      @carleymarieb5436 6 лет назад +1

      I don’t mean to sound uncaring or rude but she’s dead and I don’t think she cares or knows. I would be happy to know my body was in a museum in the future.

    • @riffhammeron
      @riffhammeron 5 лет назад +1

      That would be great if someone learns from it

    • @GoneGrimdark
      @GoneGrimdark 5 лет назад +1

      My dream is to have my remains in a museum... probably never going to happen though!

  • @Hollyhock7
    @Hollyhock7 5 лет назад +36

    Just think of all the ancient artifacts there could be under parking lots all over the world right now!!

    • @okiedokey9962
      @okiedokey9962 4 года назад +2

      Agree. They have found historical finds in Usrael and yes. They were under a Parking Lit as well..

    • @yorusuyasoul69420
      @yorusuyasoul69420 4 года назад

      Under my house theres alot of sea corals and shit found coz my place once it's under the sea but now it's a huge land inhabited by thousand of people lol

    • @CLASSICALFAN100
      @CLASSICALFAN100 3 года назад

      Does "ancient artifacts under parking lots" include Jimmy Hoffa?...lol

    • @AVIARYCOURT
      @AVIARYCOURT Год назад

      @@CLASSICALFAN100 Glen Miller!

  • @CrazyEights888
    @CrazyEights888 Год назад

    "Without knowing what's inside it" its a dead body of someone who died and you're disturbing their resting place. Just move the coffin to another area for burial.

  • @belsnickel9568
    @belsnickel9568 5 лет назад +44

    I wouldn’t be mad if someone dug me up as long as the put me back and held a ceremony so I can be put back to rest.

    • @megafoxyawesomehot69
      @megafoxyawesomehot69 5 лет назад +2

      Belsnickel back to rest? Would they be bringing you back from the dead?🤣

    • @belsnickel9568
      @belsnickel9568 5 лет назад +10

      Megan my spirit could be messed with. That why we have funerals; to cut our ties with this world so we can leave.

    • @MrRobot01010
      @MrRobot01010 5 лет назад +1

      @@belsnickel9568 so then you would have left?

    • @belsnickel9568
      @belsnickel9568 5 лет назад

      Paul Reacts what?

    • @MrRobot01010
      @MrRobot01010 5 лет назад +1

      @@belsnickel9568 if your funeral meant you cut ties with this earth and left, that means putting you "back to rest" wouldn't matter

  • @antoriamemphis
    @antoriamemphis 5 лет назад +4

    I’m deeply shocked by how roughly they excavated the coffin and cut open the lead coffin

    • @ORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR13
      @ORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR13 Год назад +1

      You've just watched the video and they explained why they had to do that and you still say that..SMH

    • @antoriamemphis
      @antoriamemphis Год назад

      @@ORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR13 you are an ignorant fool. I’ve worked with people on minimum wage who treat cheap building supplies more carefully than what is shown in this video.

  • @rhukaduka
    @rhukaduka Год назад +1

    R.I.P.-Until someone decides your rest is over.

  • @Lostouille
    @Lostouille 5 лет назад +7

    0:47 imagine when he is looking in the tiny space the cadaver's hand get off 😂😂😂

  • @kennethbailey2616
    @kennethbailey2616 5 лет назад +4

    Wow! Super interesting! I love this history so much!

  • @chrismcbee2933
    @chrismcbee2933 3 года назад +1

    This work is so interesting.

  • @toyman9642
    @toyman9642 5 лет назад +7

    Will all those leaving negative comments take a hike! This is history and archeology.

    • @philcaldwell9951
      @philcaldwell9951 5 лет назад

      Rob Tro
      Well you’re right in one aspect, history, the destruction of it!

  • @charlesbutler4646
    @charlesbutler4646 7 лет назад +147

    It would seem the DNA from this skeleton could be cross tabulated against 23 and Me, Ancestry DNA, and Family tree DNA as well as the National Geographic and other massive data bases to find potential descendant matches alive today. I'm sure there are many.

    • @badsoutherngirl
      @badsoutherngirl 6 лет назад +10

      If you have your dna done you can have it compared to other dna from ancient burials on ged match.

    • @rosestewart1606
      @rosestewart1606 6 лет назад +10

      I agree. That's one of the things they did with Richard III's bones. They just found a descendant of his family. And his bones weren't in a sarcophagus

    • @pearlcaster8287
      @pearlcaster8287 6 лет назад +12

      I agree; I have 2 books where UK DNA testing was done on a large population to trace various populations (from the 1100-1300s I believe) and cross-referenced to 20th century groups. Astonishing how little present day descendents moved much beyond their earlier ancestors locations.

    • @rosestewart1606
      @rosestewart1606 6 лет назад +7

      Pearl Caster that makes sense though. People left but the people who stayed stayed close to the same area or at least in the same country. My ancestors who left Scotland 250 years ago lived less than 100 miles from where I live...and that's with modern transportation

    • @carab.8616
      @carab.8616 6 лет назад +4

      Benedict Cumberbatch is a relative of Richard III.

  • @yaboyed5779
    @yaboyed5779 3 года назад

    These RUclips unboxing video be getting wilder and wilder everytime