Finding the Bones of Richard III, The Last Plantagenet 2012

Lately I had recalled that several years ago the bones of a king of England had been found buried in a parking lot. Through the magic of the internet, I was able to find more information and even a copy of the program I had watched back then. This was all spearheaded by a lady named Phillipa Langley and the Richard III Society. The infamous King has a loyal fanbase still clinging to hope that he would be exonerated from the disapperance and probable murder of his nephews. Days later, Richard III popped up again in a news program comparing the current Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves to Richard III. Tomorrow, August 25 represents the 13th anniversary since his bones were unearthed.

Richard III’s bones found, time estimated from rain storm and film suggesting he was found about six hours after beginning the search. Rectification based on video images puts Saturn on the Ascendant.

He was killed at the Battle of Bosworth, Baresworde, and it appears the name comes from an old English word meaning boar and enclosure. His personal heraldic emblem was a white boar. He made a daring charge to kill Henry Tudor, later Henry VII, but his horse became mired and Henry’s stepfather came to the place and chopped off the back of his skull. A boar enclosure is no where for a man who identifies with a boar to have a fight. His corpse was paraded into Leicester where at least one person stabbed his arse.

Boars are nasty and dangerous animals and Richard III similarly has quite an infamous reputation. He was a Libra Sun-Saturn. His bones were discovered when the Libra Saturn was loosely conjunct his Saturn.

King Edward IV died April 9, 1483 Julian. Richard became Lord Protector of the Realm for Edward V, his twelve year old nephew. On April 29, Richard met with Earl Rivers the maternal uncle of Edward V who had been escorting Edward V to London and arrested him April 30 as well as Edward’s elder half-brother, Richard Grey. Edward V had been sent further south. Richard then went to Edward V and told him he had stopped a plot denying him his role as Protector and escorted him to London. They entered the city May 4. On May 19, Edward V was sent to the Tower of London to be lodged for his coronation planned for June 22 and Richard demanded his younger brother and heir presumptive Richard of Shrewsbury join him.

At a Council meeting on June 13, Richard accused a man of treason and conspiracy not against the King but himself. The man was taken out into the courtyard and executed without trial. Richard of Shrewsbury entered the Tower on June 16 to attend his brother’s coronation. No coronation took place instead on June 22, a sermon was preached outside Old Saint Paul’s that Edward IV had a precontract with Lady Eleanor Butler and so the Woodville marriage was bigamous and all the children bastards. On June 25, Earl Rivers and Richard Grey were executed without trial. Edward V and Richard of Shrewsbury were last sighted in the summer of 1483. Richard III had his coronation on July 6 and with that event he had usurped the crown. He had a retrograde Aquarius Jupiter conjunct the Imum Coeli. At his core depth, a commoner King.

The next year 1484, Richard’s only child, Edward of Middleham, died. Followed the next year 1485 by his wife, Anne Neville. His Leo Pluto then brought the boar himself to the boar’s enclosure where he was slaughtered and humiliated. Richard at Bosworth.

Phillipa Langley

Such a strange name for a woman who is attached to Richard III. Edmund of Langley, the first Duke of York, was the founder of the House of York. His mother was Phillipa of Hainault. Although the claim to the throne is from a descendant of Lionel of Antwerp, it is Edmund who gave rise to Richard III’s supposed descent from Edward III of England. Supposed because in finding the bones, the male DNA doesn’t match the Beaufort line. At least one if not both lines, is a cuckoo in the nest. A cuckoo egg is laid in another bird’s nest and when the cuckoo is born it pushes the rightful fledglings out of the nest. An apt metaphor for Richard III who by his actions appears to be a cuckoo.

He also had scoliosis and so that was also proved by the dig. Shakespeare called him a hunchback. His short stature was due to the curvature of his spine. Crooked. Twisted.

Synastry Chart of Richard III & Phillipa Langley. His time is low confidence.

Phillipa Langley has found her royal quest, Leo north node. From the retrograde Aquarius Saturn conjunct her south node to Richard III’s Leo Pluto she turns up where death and the prince are concerned. His grave. The nephews. Did Richard III murder his nephews? The astrology isn’t clear but there may be one clue, Richard had a 0° Scorpio Mercury conjunct a Libra Ceres and square the Leo Uranus (royal usurper) and trine the Cancer Chiron. The twins who are heirs lie in Scorpio, the zodiac sign of transformation and death, blocking the royal usurper. Phillipa Langley has a Pisces Chiron-Jupiter. Her sensitivity to the wounded King. Luminous eyes hoping the experts won’t say he is a crookback or a murderer or isn’t a Plantagenet. Richard’s Libra Saturn bones are weighed in the scales of justice and spill their secrets.