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Graham
02-12-2014, 05:32 PM
Richard III: Scientists to sequence DNA
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leicestershire-26142693
The DNA of Richard III is to be mapped, potentially revealing details like hair and eye colour, researchers have said.

The project is to be led by the University of Leicester geneticist who helped identify the remains.

His remains were found in a Leicester car park in 2012.

The £100,000 study, expected to last at least 18 months, aims to provide an archive of Richard III's DNA information for historians, scientists and the public.

Details of Richard III's appearance are not known for certain because all portraits of him were done long after his death.

He died in the Battle of Bosworth in 1485, but his grave was lost when the surrounding church was demolished.

The sequencing will be led by Leicester genetics expert Turi King.

Among the figures of historical importance whose remains have undergone such a procedure are Otzi the Iceman, who was discovered on the Alpine border between Italy and Austria in 1991; a 4,000-year-old Greenlandic Inuit and a 7,000-year-old hunter gatherer from Spain found in 2006.

The research will allow scientists to decide if Richard III suffered from conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, or scoliosis or if he had a "genetic predisposition" to them.

Dr King and her colleagues will also sequence the DNA of one of Richard III's living relatives, Canadian Michael Ibsen, whose DNA was used to confirm the king's identity.

"It is an extremely rare occurrence that archaeologists are involved in the excavation of a known individual, let alone a king of England," Dr King said.

She said researchers can now "sequence entire genomes from ancient individuals and with them, those of pathogens that may have caused infectious disease".

"You can actually look across his entire genetic make-up and say something about his ancestry - it is likely he was northern European," she added.

However, the DNA research was "not likely" to allow people to find out more easily if they are directly related to Richard III, a spokeswoman added.

The final resting place of the remains is still the subject of a legal case, with some distant relatives calling for the bones to go to York, rather than Leicester.

The project will be funded by Wellcome Trust, a medical research charity, the Leverhulme Trust and DNA fingerprinting and profiling pioneer Sir Alec Jeffreys.

Jackson
02-12-2014, 05:54 PM
Interesting, i guess they are doing his y dna too?

Graham
02-12-2014, 06:01 PM
Interesting, i guess they are doing his y dna too?

Hope so. We already know that the Stewart Scots Kings were R1b-L21 S310. 16% of Scotsmen with the surname Stewart carry the same Royal marker.

Maybe we get some English decedents. :)

Artek
02-13-2014, 07:58 AM
I will come and beat the sh*t out of them if they don't test y-dna. If there are no false paternity events, we should know another y-dna of many other royal lines related to the House of York. I would bet he is R1b-U106 anyway, that would be boring but nice to know..

Graham
02-13-2014, 02:58 PM
he comes from proper Norman lineage. I think it could be I1 of some sort. Could be the above or it would be cool to be R1a. Can't even rule out L21. Normans were mixed.

Jackson
02-13-2014, 05:26 PM
he comes from proper Norman lineage. I think it could be I1 of some sort. Could be the above or it would be cool to be R1a. Can't even rule out L21. Normans were mixed.

Would be cool if he is I1.

Artek
02-13-2014, 05:43 PM
he comes from proper Norman lineage. I think it could be I1 of some sort. Could be the above or it would be cool to be R1a. Can't even rule out L21. Normans were mixed.
Are there any bastard or cadet-branch surnames conected with Plantagenets, House of York etc.? I can search a little bit in the FTDNA projects...