The Grey Friars Women


The medieval church of Grey Friars was rediscovered in 2012, along with the skeleton of the missing King Richard III, beneath a parking lot in Leicester, England. A year later four more graves turned up. Since it was a monastery, everyone expected to find a few friars or knights.

A few feet away from the king, an ornate lead coffin produced a woman instead. She was elderly, passed away before Richard during the 13th-14th century, and showed signs of high status. Her casket was inside a stone sarcophagus near the high altar. Two middle-aged women in wooden coffins rested in the choir area of the ruins, where the king himself was buried. A fourth female was found in a pit. None of their identities are known. The gender ratio is also surprising. Male burials outstrip females’ in most monastic graveyards in England, up to 20 men for every woman. It is estimated that there are many more graves, but a clear answer will not be forthcoming since most are beneath modern housing.


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