DNA testing could identify the remains of the "Princes in the Tower," as mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) linked to the princes has been discovered through a descendant, and a sample of Mary Tudor, Queen of France's hair exists for potential comparison.
When I visited Bury St Edmunds to see the tomb of Mary Tudor, Queen of France, I also visited the nearby Moyse's Hall museum, to see the locket containing a lock of Mary Tudor's hair, (pictured above) which was taken when her coffin was moved to its present location. (It was reported that when Mary's coffin was opened her hair was some two feet long and a ‘reddish-gold’ colour.)
Several other locks of hair were taken, including this one, by historian Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford, and Lady Margaret Bentinck, Duchess of Portland:
As well as DNA from cells, it is also possible to extract mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from the cushion of cytoplasm which surrounds our cells. Importantly, mtDNA is inherited unchanged down the maternal line, passed from mothers to both sons and daughters, but sons cannot pass along their mothers' mtDNA to their children because mtDNA is transmitted through the female egg.
This means Mary Tudor, Queen of France, (and her brother King Henry VIII) will have shared mtDNA with the princes through their mother, Elizabeth of York and grandmother, Elizabeth Woodville - yet I wonder if we will ever have access to the supposed remains of the princes in Westminster Abbey.
Tony Riches
Courage, passion and adventure in the turbulent world of the Tudor court - the story of King Henry VIII's youngest sister: Mary - Tudor Princess











