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Ars Technica Mar 26, 2026 at 15:17 Big Tech Stable Warm

Damaged church floor may have revealed the grave of the fourth musketeer

This will not be turning up in the church rummage sale.

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By Kiona N. Smith Original source
Damaged church floor may have revealed the grave of the fourth musketeer

Recent repairs to a centuries-old tile floor at a church in the Netherlands may have revealed the skeleton of the French Musketeer d’Artagnan. Today, Charles de Batz de Castlemore, Count d'Artagnan, is best known as a character in The Three Musketeers, written by Alexandre Dumas and eventually played by both Gene Kelly and future Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy—but he was a real French military officer and spy. D’Artagnan died during a siege, and the whereabouts of his body have remained a mystery for more than 350 years. But an archaeologist in the Netherlands recently unearthed a skeleton from the floor of a 17th-century church that could actually be d’Artagnan. “It is only the dead who do not return” The ground beneath the centuries-old Saints Peter and Paul Church subsided earlier this year, cracking a few of the blue tiles that pave the chapel’s floor. During repairs, church staff decided to have a look beneath the floor to see if there was any truth to the rumor that d’Artagnan—famous French Musketeer and inspiration for a series of swashbuckling novels—lay buried beneath their church. It turns out that there actually was a skeleton buried under the church floor, and there’s a decent chance it’s d’Artagnan himself. Read full article Comments

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Damaged church floor may have revealed the grave of the fourth musketeer

This will not be turning up in the church rummage sale.

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