Quote:
Originally Posted by gmw
One of the big mysteries, which if solved may reveal the guilty party, is the resounding silence surrounding the boys' disappearance. According to Wikipedia: "Only one contemporary narrative account of the boys' time in the tower exists: that of Dominic Mancini. Mancini's account was not discovered until 1934, in the Municipal Library in Lille."
I find it very strange that there has not been something more. Without it, we don't even know exactly when the boys disappeared, which makes it rather difficult to do much finger pointing.
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That's true, I think that's also why in mock trials the verdict usually supports Richard. They don't have enough evidence to pin Richard with the murders. It was always on my mind how difficult it must have been for the people of the Kingdom. They can't say they suspect a sitting King of the murders. If it was King Richard III or KIng Henry Vll. What ever they thought they couldn't say it.