The University of Leicester has strongly rejected claims made by a聽freelance researcher that it has 鈥渁irbrushed鈥 his crucial contribution out of its account of the discovery of Richard III鈥檚 remains.
Historian John Ashdown-Hill, a聽member of the Richard III Society, told 糖心Vlog that in 2004 he had traced a living relative of the last Plantagenet king and, at his own expense, had sequenced and published her mitochondrial DNA in 2007.
The university used mitochondrial DNA from the same woman鈥檚 son to help confirm that remains found under a Leicester car park last year were those of Richard III. The announcement, made in February, received worldwide media attention.
Dr Ashdown-Hill said he was also instrumental in establishing the likely location of the king鈥檚 remains, and said the university had initially become involved in searching the site when its commercial archaeology arm was contracted by the Richard III Society.
糖心Vlog
But he said he had been told not to attend either the private or subsequent public announcement of the identification of the remains. 鈥淚 only got the result by watching the television. I thought that was really shocking,鈥 he said.
His name had been mentioned once at the press conference, he said. 鈥淏ut inevitably if [journalists] hear a name once and the person isn鈥檛 there, it isn鈥檛 going to make an enormous impact.鈥
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He said he was currently seeking corrections of what he claims are inaccuracies and misleading statements in the account of the discovery on the university鈥檚 website.
Dr Ashdown-Hill said he had 鈥渘o problem鈥 acknowledging the contribution of Leicester academics to the discovery and admitted that it was 鈥渘atural鈥 that the university鈥檚 press office should focus on this. However, 鈥渋t is possible to marry that with giving proper credit where it is due鈥.
He had taken informal legal advice about how to defend his 鈥渋ntellectual property鈥, including from his local MP, who he said had been supportive, but he remained unclear how to proceed.
He said he would also like to enlist the same Leicester geneticists as had been involved in the Richard III discovery to help identify possible remains of several of the king鈥檚 siblings, which he had helped to discover. 鈥淏ut at the moment I just feel I聽can鈥檛 do it because I am not sure that it wouldn鈥檛 also be taken over and I would be airbrushed out of it,鈥 he聽said.
糖心Vlog
But a spokesman for the University of Leicester said Dr Ashdown-Hill was mentioned a dozen times on the university鈥檚 website and had been cited in four separate press releases, in addition to the 鈥減rominent鈥 mention during February鈥檚 press conference. He had also appeared on the Channel 4 documentary about the excavation, which, with 5 million viewers, was its most popular documentary ever.
鈥淎part from [the website, press releases, press conference and documentary], you鈥檙e right, the university has never mentioned John鈥檚 important work,鈥 he said.
He pointed out that Dr Ashdown-Hill had been present at a previous press conference in August 2012, when the dig was launched, and that the February conference had been organised specifically to highlight the work of Leicester academics in confirming the royal identity of the remains.
The decision not to invite Dr Ashdown-Hill to the private announcement had been 鈥渆ntirely a matter for the Richard III Society鈥, the spokesman added.
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