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Lost remains of French musketeer d’Artagnan may have been found in Dutch church

DNA testing is under way to verify ⁠the skeleton. D’Artagnan, fictionalised in Alexandre ⁠Dumas’ novel The ⁠Three Musketeers, died in 1673

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An excavation pit opened in the floor at the Peter and Paul Church in Maastricht, Netherlands, where archaeologists believe they may have uncovered the skeletal remains of musketeer d’Artagnan. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

The skeleton of famed French musketeer Charles de Batz de Castelmore d’Artagnan may have been found in front of a church altar in the Dutch city of Maastricht, church officials and an archaeologist said on Wednesday.

Workers ‌discovered a grave containing human remains beneath tiles after part of the floor of St Peter and Paul Church subsided in February, triggering a race to identify the skeleton through DNA testing.

“This has truly become a top-level investigation, in which we want to be absolutely certain – or as certain as possible – whether it is the famous musketeer, ⁠who was killed here near Maastricht,” archaeologist Wim Dijkman said.

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The church had previously been ‌identified as a possible resting place of the 17th-century soldier. The DNA retrieved from a jawbone is now being tested against that of descendants.

A fictionalised version of d’Artagnan was the hero of Alexandre ⁠Dumas’ 1844 novel The ⁠Three Musketeers, a hot-headed teenager who becomes the fourth musketeer. But d’Artagnan was a real historical figure.

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Like his fictitious counterpart, ‌d’Artagnan served French “Sun King” Louis XIV and eventually became captain-lieutenant of the musketeers. He was killed during the French ‌siege of Maastricht ‌in the Franco-Dutch War on June 25, 1673, after being struck in the throat ‌by a musket ball.

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