Scientists believe the information will reveal the dead monarch's hair and eye colour, provide insights into his ancestry, and even give some hints as to what ailed the infamous monarch, whose skeleton was unearthed beneath a parking lot in the English city of Leicester in 2012.
The University of Leicester's Turi King, who is leading the gene sequencing project, said today that sequencing Richard III's genome "will help to teach us not only about him, but foment discussion about how our DNA informs our sense of identity, our past and our future."