
-
Argentines commemorate Jewish center bombing, demand justice
-
Frank aims to take Tottenham to 'new heights'
-
'Mass grave': Medics appeal for aid at last working hospital in Syria's Sweida
-
Over 11 mn refugees risk losing aid because of funding cuts: UN
-
Hojgaard twins hoping for British Open showdown
-
Usyk at career heaviest for title fight with Dubois
-
Charging Scheffler closes on British Open lead
-
Brazil police raid home of Bolsonaro, accused of plotting coup
-
France museum-goer eats million-dollar banana taped to wall
-
Pogacar extends Tour de France lead with dominant time-trial win
-
Tomorrowland music festival opens with new stage after blaze
-
Arsenal seal divisive move for Chelsea winger Madueke
-
G20 nations agree central bank independence 'crucial'
-
Pogacar extends Tour de France lead with uphill time-trial win
-
'Witnesses to despair': Marseille sees poverty fuel cocaine problem
-
Stocks consolidate after bumper week buoyed by resilient US economy
-
MacIntyre 'will not back off' in bid for first major title
-
What's in the EU's two-trillion-euro budget bazooka?
-
EU, UK target Russian oil in tough new Ukraine war sanctions
-
Barca's planned Camp Nou return in August scrapped
-
McIlroy 'excited' for shot at homecoming British Open glory
-
Hunter Harman stalking second British Open crown
-
Marquez tops Czech MotoGP practice as Martin returns
-
Disinformation catalyses anti-migrant unrest in Spain
-
Ex-Brazil president Bolsonaro must wear monitoring device: Supreme Court
-
Resilient US economy spurs on stock markets
-
Trump administration seeks to release some of Epstein probe material
-
Man Utd agree deal to sign Brentford winger Mbeumo: reports
-
New clashes rock Syria's Druze heartland as tribal fighters reinforce Bedouin
-
Germany presses ahead with deportations to Afghanistan
-
Crews rescue 18 miners trapped in Colombia
-
McIlroy five back as Harman leads British Open
-
Lyles the showman ready to deliver 100m entertainment
-
EU targets Russian oil in tough new Ukraine war sanctions
-
Liverpool line up swoop for Frankfurt striker Ekitike: reports
-
Indie game studios battle for piece of Switch 2 success
-
Former Liverpool and Man Utd star Ince banned for drink-driving
-
Spain taming fire that belched smoke cloud over Madrid
-
Top Holy Land clerics visit Gaza after deadly church strike
-
Scotland end tour with seven-try thrashing of Samoa
-
Sharaa's pullout from Syria Druze heartland exposes shaky leadership
-
Trump team to seek release of Epstein documents
-
Wrexham chief wants playoff push after promotion to Championship
-
Snoop Dogg becomes co-owner of Championship club Swansea
-
Pakistan bans new hotel construction around tourist lakes
-
Trump's budget hacksaw leaves public broadcasting on precipice
-
New deep sea mining rules lack consensus despite US pressure
-
Stocks head for positive end to week, Tokyo struggles ahead of vote
-
North Korea bars foreign tourists from new seaside resort
-
Lions ignoring the noise ahead of Wallabies Test

UK 'princes in the tower' murder probe clears Richard III
It is one of history's most intriguing "murders" -- the mysterious disappearance over five centuries ago of two young princes from the Tower of London.
Nearly 200 years after they disappeared, two small skeletons were found in a wooden box at the historic tower and reburied at Westminster Abbey.
The remains were believed, but never proved, to be those of the two brothers -- heir to the throne Edward, 12, and Richard, nine, the sons of King Edward IV of England, who were reputedly murdered at the behest of their uncle, Richard Duke of Gloucester.
William Shakespeare later immortalised him in Richard III as a scheming hunchback who did away with his royal nephews so he could take the crown himself, sealing his reputation as a child killer.
Now British author Philippa Langley, who helped unearth Richard's body from a central England carpark in 2012, has claimed that the princes -- far from being killed -- actually survived.
The elder prince, Edward, was heir to the throne at the time of his disappearance and would have ruled as King Edward V of England.
Langley decided to delve into the mystery after coming to believe that the conventional narrative in which Richard had the young princes killed smacked of "history being written by the victors".
She was finally spurred into action after reading an article about Richard's reburial at Leicester Cathedral in 2015 which questioned whether the nation should honour a "child killer".
"I think I'd always realised that the story sort of developed during the reign of the Tudors," she said, adding that it was then "repeated and repeated over time" until it became "truth and fact".
- Tudor mud -
The last English king to die in battle, Richard ruled from 1483 until his brutal death at the Battle of Bosworth near Leicester in 1485, aged 32.
Bosworth was the last major conflict in the Wars of the Roses and changed the course of English history because the Tudor dynasty of Henry VII captured the crown from Richard's Plantagenets.
Langley attributes the accepted story that Richard had the boys murdered to King Henry VII, a "very, very intelligent individual, but suspicious and highly paranoid".
"He had a massive spy network working for him. And he was able to completely control the narrative," she said, adding that Richard ended up "covered in Tudor mud".
Taking a cold case review approach to the historical "whodunnit", Langley says she assembled a group of investigative specialists, including police and lawyers, to advise her.
"They said: 'Look, if you haven't got any confirmed, identified bodies, then it has to be a missing persons investigation and you have to follow that methodology'.
"They said: 'You have to actively look for evidence'. That's when it really started to get interesting."
Langley put out an appeal for volunteers to scour archives, only to be inundated with offers of help from people ranging from ordinary citizens to medieval historians.
The result was the decade-long Missing Princes Project which she says unearthed a significant amount of information pointing to the survival of both young princes.
- Survival theory -
Langley now believes that it is up to Richard's detractors to disprove the survival thesis, which she outlines in the new book "The Princes in the Tower: Solving History's Greatest Cold Case".
"The onus is now on them to find the evidence that the boys died.
"They cannot say Richard III murdered the princes in the tower any more because we found numerous proofs of life everywhere," she said.
Key to Langley's conviction that both boys survived are documents discovered supporting a rebellion by "Edward IV's son".
During the rebellion in 1487, Lambert Simnel, a pretender to the throne who came forward after Richard's death, was crowned in Dublin.
According to fresh references found by the project, the boy was "called" or said to be "a son of King Edward", which she believes points to Simnel being the elder prince, son of Edward IV.
The reaction to Langley's research has been mixed.
Michael Dobson, director and a professor of Shakespeare studies at the University of Birmingham's Shakespeare Institute, expressed scepticism.
"Given the ways of dynastic monarchy, I think Richard would have been taking a very big risk in leaving those princes alive," he said.
"The chances of their having accidentally gone missing while incarcerated on his orders in the Tower of London seem pretty remote."
E.Burkhard--VB