Article 74GWR Damaged church floor may have revealed the grave of the fourth musketeer

Damaged church floor may have revealed the grave of the fourth musketeer

by
Kiona N. Smith
from Ars Technica - All content on (#74GWR)

Recent repairs to a centuries-old tile floor at a church in the Netherlands may have revealed the skeleton of the French Musketeer d'Artagnan.

Today, Charles de Batz de Castlemore, Count d'Artagnan, is best known as a character in The Three Musketeers, written by Alexandre Dumas and eventually played by both Gene Kelly and future Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy-but he was a real French military officer and spy. D'Artagnan died during a siege, and the whereabouts of his body have remained a mystery for more than 350 years. But an archaeologist in the Netherlands recently unearthed a skeleton from the floor of a 17th-century church that could actually be d'Artagnan.

It is only the dead who do not return"

The ground beneath the centuries-old Saints Peter and Paul Church subsided earlier this year, cracking a few of the blue tiles that pave the chapel's floor. During repairs, church staff decided to have a look beneath the floor to see if there was any truth to the rumor that d'Artagnan-famous French Musketeer and inspiration for a series of swashbuckling novels-lay buried beneath their church. It turns out that there actually was a skeleton buried under the church floor, and there's a decent chance it's d'Artagnan himself.

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