The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Remains could hold answers to 270-year-old mystery

Scientists find human bones inside lead casket

- ALAN RICHARDSON arichardso­n@thecourier.co.uk

Forensic experts exhumed a body from a Highland crypt yesterday hoping to crack a 270-year-old mystery – whether it contains the remains of a notorious 18th Century clan chief.

Simon Fraser, the 11th Lord Lovat, was the last man executed at the Tower of London in 1747 for supporting the Jacobite rebellion.

A team of scientists led by Invernessb­orn anthropolo­gist Professor Sue Black opened a lead casket in Wardlaw Mausoleum at Kirkhill, near the Highland capital, yesterday morning and discovered bones of a man.

She hopes to prove once and for all that any remains inside were Lord Lovat, a ruthless Jacobite sympathise­r.

Nicknamed the Old Fox, he was executed for backing Bonnie Prince Charlie, whose uprising ended with the Battle of Culloden in 1746.

Lovat’s body was buried under the floor of a chapel at the Tower, but according to the Clan Fraser, it was later taken by supporters to Scotland and laid to rest in the family mausoleum.

Prof Black described her excitement at the challenge which cleared the first hurdle as soon as the coffin was opened – that the bones were human.

The Dundee University professor said: “Firstly, we certainly have a human body there, as it could easily have been house bricks and the study would have been over before it had even started.

“It is an intact body, despite there being no head. We have to determine whether it is an elderly male, because if it is not then there is a bigger mystery as to whose remains they belong to.

“The examinatio­n will be about ensuring that the individual is male, that he is of the right age, that he is of the same height and that there is evidence from the remains of physical conditions he may have had whilst in life.

“We will check for dismemberm­ent cuts and they should be consistent with a heavy bladed implement if it is indeed him. These will be on his remaining neck bones.”

Prof Black is not confident of obtaining DNA, and cannot do a facial constructi­on without a head.

The best way to identify whether it is the clan chief is to determine whether any of the neck bones feature axe marks.

She said: “Finding such a mark, and matching it with the axe at the Tower of London – which is still there – would give a definitive answer.”

The Old Fox is known today by readers and television audiences as the grandfathe­r of Jamie Fraser, a leading character in the Outlander books and TV drama.

It is an intact body, despite there being no head

 ?? Picture: Sandy McCook. ?? Professor Sue Black at work with some of the bones removed from the coffin yesterday.
Picture: Sandy McCook. Professor Sue Black at work with some of the bones removed from the coffin yesterday.
 ?? Picture: Sandy McCook. ?? TV presenter Dan Snow in the crypt with the open coffin.
Picture: Sandy McCook. TV presenter Dan Snow in the crypt with the open coffin.

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