
However, tests have revealed that the bones are more than 200 years older. This was disappointing to say the least, following the initial excitement.
Remains from an earlier excavation were kept in a box in a storeroom at the Winchester City Museum since 1999, but it was only recently that scholars started to suspect that the remains might be of someone very important.

This is very exciting! Finding Alfred's bones would be a find much bigger than Richard III's remains, which I blogged about here and here.
A quick recap: Alfred the Great ruled Wessex from 871 to 899 and is remembered for keeping the Vikings and Danes at bay, for his military prowess and strategies, for starting the unification of England, for setting up English as the standard of language for education and government, for his social and educational reforms, and for his sweeping law codes. He was known to have suffered from an unknown debilitating illness that some suspect might've been Crohn's Disease or migraines.
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