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Home » Researcher claims he’s found King Alfred the Great under a car park in Winchester – UK Times
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Researcher claims he’s found King Alfred the Great under a car park in Winchester – UK Times

By uk-times.com14 July 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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Researcher claims he’s found King Alfred the Great under a car park in Winchester – UK Times
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A historical researcher claims he has identified the location of the remains of King Alfred the Great in a Winchester car park.

King Alfred the Great ruled over Wessex, an Anglo-Saxon kingdom which now forms modern-day south and southwest England, from 871 to 899.

He is widely recognised for introducing lasting reforms in law, education, and state administration during the early medieval period, which laid the foundations for the unification of England in 927.

King Alfred the Great was given the epithet ‘the Great’ as early as the 13th century for his improvements to the Anglo-Saxon legal system and military structure
King Alfred the Great was given the epithet ‘the Great’ as early as the 13th century for his improvements to the Anglo-Saxon legal system and military structure (PA Archive)

Researcher Graham Phillips, a self-described “real-life Indiana Jones”, has authored 27 books examining historical mysteries, including the treasure of Solomon and the death of Napoleon.

He has also focused extensively on Alfred the Great, after starting a hunt for his resting place following a failed archaeological excavation 13 years ago.

But the search for the remains of the King has spanned well over a century, encountering several hurdles such as misidentified bones and excavating the wrong grave entirely.

Now, Mr Phillips claims that the remains lie in a Winchester car park, 20 yards from a garden slab which has marked the King’s presumed grave for the past 23 years.

Speaking to BBC Radio Solent, he said: “Bizarrely, like Richard III, the bones are under a car park.”

King Alfred was first buried at Winchester’s Old Minster following his death in 899, and he was then moved to the New Minster by his son, Edward the Elder. In 1110 he was moved again to Hyde Abbey.

Following the abbey’s demolition in 1539, the exact whereabouts of the King’s remains were unconfirmed until 1866, when antiquarian John Mellor excavated the site during the construction of a workhouse. The remains found at the site were reburied at St Bartholomew’s Church.

However, when the University of Winchester exhumed and carbon-dated these bones in 2013, they were found to date more than 200 years after Alfred’s death.

A year later, DNA testing revealed that a fragment of pelvis bone found in Hyde Abbey could have belonged to the King or his son, indicating the remains moved in 1866 were not Alfred’s.

Instead, Mr Phillips believes that the bones were moved again in 1788, when a prison was built next to the abbey ruins. He said this is supported by a journal article dating back to 1800 that describes prisoners unearthing a lead-lined coffin and bones during the modelling of the garden, which were then reburied nearby.

Based on these findings, he is calling for a non-invasive ground-penetrating radar survey of the car park. Radar surveying has proven successful in the past, and was the same method used to locate Richard III’s remains in a Leicester car park in 2012.

The remains of King Richard III were discovered in 2012 in a Leicester car park, 500 years after he was killed during the Battle of Bosworth
The remains of King Richard III were discovered in 2012 in a Leicester car park, 500 years after he was killed during the Battle of Bosworth (Getty)

The alleged “nephew-killer’s” body was found 500 years after his death, marking one of the strongest archaeological identifications of a named historical individual ever achieved, according to the archaeology team at the University of Leicester.

Mr Phillips’s claim has not yet been independently reviewed by any archaeologist or heritage body.

The University of Winchester refrained from commenting on the researcher’s claim, saying finding the resting place of King Alfred is “complex”. It added it continues to work closely with Hyde900’s community archaeology project to investigate the abbey complex.

Dr Katherine Weikert, head of the school of humanities at the university, said: “Our medieval past is filled with meaning for today’s world. It is always great to see people excited about medieval history, and doubly so when it comes to Alfred here in Winchester.”

Without permission to survey the site, Mr Phillips accepted some investigations can remain unresolved.

”Very often I can find good proof to finalise the argument,” he told the BBC. “But very often it’s left open, and somebody else in the future may have to take it up.”

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