Spanish royal murder mystery solved
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MADRID (Reuters) – For more than 600 years, Spaniards have believed Prince Sancho de Castiles uncle poisoned him to become king of Spain, but studies of the boys mummified body show the seven-year-old died of natural causes.
One of Spains great royal legends may have been put to rest by medical tests that show Sancho, son of King Pedro I the Cruel of Castile, and a successor to the throne, was likely to have died in 1370 of a lung infection such as pneumonia.
Examinations of the princes body have found no trace of cyanide, arsenic, mercury or any other poison his uncle, Enrique, was believed to have used to kill him, according to the convent where the princes remains have lain since 1409.
It appears the prince wasnt poisoned after all, the convents Sister Maria Jesus Galan said on Saturday.
The study led by the University of Granada and the pathology unit of Barcelonas Hospital Clinico found Sancho had inflamed lungs after chronic exposure to smoke, which was likely to have come from an open fire.
Enrique, the illegitimate son of Alfonso XI of Castile, killed his half brother Pedro I in the Castilian civil war in 1369 and became King Enrique I the Bastard of Castile.
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Last Updated: 23 December 2006
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