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Celtic Radio Community > The Jester's Court > Skeletons Of Musketeers Found


Posted by: MDF3530 06-May-2004, 04:10 PM
Here's an interesting news article I found:

Skeleton find linked to D'Artagnan's musketeers

5 May 2004

Amsterdam ? The seven skeletons uncovered in a front garden in Maastricht on Tuesday may be the remains of musketeers who died during a fierce 17th century battle between D'Artagnan French troops and defenders of the southern Dutch city, it has been revealed.

The famous French musketeer D'Artagnan ? who was an officer in French King Louis XIV personal guard and led the siege of Maastricht ? was killed in the battle. The French troops occupied the Dutch city from 1673 to 1679.

D'Artagnan was immortalized and romanticized by writer Alexandre Dumas in his novel The Three Musketeers.

The skeletal remains of at least seven people were uncovered during renovation work on the front garden of a house on Picardenlaan in Maastricht, Dutch news agency ANP reported.

Experts from the national forensic institute NFI were called in to ascertain whether an old burial site had been disturbed or whether the remains were from victims of crime buried there in recent years.

But the focus shifted to a 17th century battle on Wednesday as residents also claimed to have previously found coins dating back to that time in their backyards.

On 14 June 1673, Louis XIV's troops started to surround the city of Maastricht. Under the leadership of Captain-Lieutenant D'Artagnan, the First Company of "Mousquetaires du Roi" prepared to storm a rampart located in front of one of the city's gates.

The assault on the bulwark took place not far from where the seven skeletons were found. The elite French officer, Charles de Batz de Castelmore (better known as D'Artagnan) was killed on 25 June 1673 during a night attack on the Tongerse Poort (Tongerse Gate).

Despite the fact that D'Artagnan was killed after being shot in the head by a musket bullet fired from the nearby fortress wall, the Dutch city surrendered to French troops on 30 June.

According to French sources from that time, the attack on the Tongerse Poort five days earlier had cost the lives of more than 100 French soldiers.

D'Artagnan was the popular hero from the adventure novels of Alexandre Dumas ("The Three Musketeers", "Twenty Years After" and "The Man in the Iron Mask"). The unofficial fourth musketeer represented traditional, heroic values.

URL: http://www.expatica.com/source/site_article.asp?subchannel_id=25&story_id=7291

Posted by: Richard Bercot 06-May-2004, 10:23 PM
Thanks MDF, that was indeed a very interesting article. thumbs_up.gif

You learn something new every day. wink.gif

Posted by: faolin 06-May-2004, 11:52 PM
It's amazing what you can dig up if you look in the right spot these days biggrin.gif Though it does remind me of those poor people in Rome who wanted to build a subway system, but every time they dug anywhere they kept on uncovering artifacts, and the site was dedicated as a historical preserve!

Posted by: CelticRose 07-May-2004, 12:58 AM
Mike, is this really for real? unsure.gif

Posted by: Blue_Rogue 07-May-2004, 07:02 AM
Very interesting, very cool!!

Thanks Mike. biggrin.gif

Posted by: Aragorn 07-May-2004, 10:19 AM
Very very interesting. I love articles like this when history is revealed. I wonder how they came upon them? Maybe a gardener was doing some weeding? Someone just started digging there for no apparent reason? hehe, awesome find though. biggrin.gif Thx

Posted by: celtica 07-May-2004, 10:50 AM
Thanks for the article, how exciting is this discovery !
I read a part of the rest of the magazine, very interesting, specially the article about the new french singers like Bénabar, Carla Bruni, Vincent Delerm, I love them !

Posted by: MDF3530 07-May-2004, 02:04 PM
QUOTE (CelticRose @ May 7 2004, 01:58 AM)
Mike, is this really for real? unsure.gif

I heard this on one of the local news stations yesterday.

Posted by: Annabelle 07-May-2004, 02:14 PM
I find things like this amazing! I saw a article in the abbey about whenthey did a remodeling of the abbey where Robert De Bruce is buried in the chapel. They inspected the site and bones and took DNA evidence before putting him back into the floor. I find stuff like this amazing!

Posted by: Dreamer1 09-May-2004, 10:54 AM
Wonderful post, Mike--thanks!! It's exciting to hear and read about finds like this, and I'm glad you shared it with us.

Dreamer1

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