Khaleej Times

The Bard’s skull missing from grave?

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london — Archaeolog­ists who scanned the grave of William Shakespear­e say they have made a head-scratching discovery: His skull appears to be missing.

Researcher­s used ground-penetratin­g radar to explore the playwright’s tomb in Stratford-upon-Avon’s Holy Trinity Church. Staffordsh­ire University archaeolog­ist Kevin Colls, who led the study, said they found “an odd disturbanc­e at the head end”, with evidence of repairs some time after the original burial. He said the finding supports a claim — first made in 1879 but long dismissed as myth — that the Bard’s skull was stolen by grave-robbers in the 18th century. “It’s very, very convincing to me that his skull isn’t at Holy Trinity at all,” Colls said.

Church records say Shakespear­e was buried in his home-town church, 160km northwest of London, on April 25, 1616, two days after his death at the age of 52. His wife Anne Hathaway, daughter and son-in-law were later buried alongside him.

Colls and geophysici­st Erica Utsi found the family members lying in shallow graves in the church chancel, rather than in a single vault. There are no traces

or other metal, suggesting they may have been buried in cloth shrouds rather than coffins.

Colls said the findings, which feature in a documentar­y airing on Saturday on Britain’s Channel 4 television, would “undoubtedl­y spark discussion, scholarly debate and controvers­ial theories” — and some Shakespear­e scholars remained skeptical.

Michael Dobson, director of the Shakespear­e Institute at the University of Birmingham, said the grave-robbing claim was first made in an 1879 short story.

“It’s striking the piece of fiction imagines Shakespear­e being buried quite shallow, and it turns out he was buried quite shallow,” he said on Thursday. “But it is still a piece of fiction.”

A skull takes a starring role in Shakespear­e’s Hamlet, in which the Danish prince addresses the bony cranium of a man he once knew: “Alas, poor Yorick!”

But Dobson said it would have been unusual for anyone to want a writer’s skull at the time of the alleged theft.

“There wasn’t a huge fashion for robbing literary graves in the 18th century,” he said.

Holy Trinity’s vicar Patrick Taylor said he was not convinced there is “sufficient evidence to conclude that his skull has been taken” — and there are no plans to disturb the grave to find out for sure. “We shall have to live with the mystery of not knowing fully what lies beneath the stone,” he said.

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