Philippa Langley

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Philippa Jayne Langley, MBE (born 29 June 1962) is a Scottish screenwriter and historian who is best known for her contribution to the exhumation of Richard III in 2012.

Langley is the President of the Scottish branch of the Richard III Society.[1] She attributes the discovery to a feeling she had when first visiting the northern end of the Social Services car park where the king was later found, having gone to Leicester for the purpose of finding out more about the historical figure for a screenplay she was writing (though other members of the Richard III Society had suggested the three central car parks location as long ago as 1975 [2] but an oversight in footnoting gave no evidence for it). According to Langley, "the first time I stood in that car park, the strangest feeling just washed over me. I thought: 'I am standing on Richard's grave'."[3] She proceeded to raise money for, organise and commission the excavation of the site, leading to the eventual discovery of Richard III's remains.[4] She later contributed to a documentary about the project, titled Richard III: The King in the Car Park based on her original Looking For Richard Project.[3]

Langley is currently working on the screenplay for a proposed film on the life of Richard III, in which she hopes Richard will be portrayed by English actor Richard Armitage, who himself was named after the king.[5] She is co-author, with Michael K. Jones, of The King's Grave: The Search for Richard III (US title: The King`s Grave: The Discovery of Richard III’s Lost Burial Place and the Clues It Holds).

In 2014, Langley detailed the years of research behind the Looking For Richard Project that got her to the northern end of the car park in Leicester in search of the church and grave in Finding Richard III: The Official Account of Research by the Retrieval & Reburial Project. The co-authored work includes chapters from Looking For Richard Project members, Dr. John Ashdown-Hill and Dr David and Wendy Johnson and is edited by Annette Carson.

In March 2015, she backed a project to locate the remains of Henry I of England, who was buried at Reading Abbey which later fell into ruin.[6]

Langley was awarded an MBE in 2015 for "services to the exhumation and identification of Richard III".[7]

References

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  7. Leicester Mercury. Accessed 12 June 2015

Further reading

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External links

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