THE battle for the final resting place of King Richard III seems won, with the decision now in the hands of university experts.

The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) confirmed yesterday it was the University of Leicester's decision to make – as it had been granted permission to exhume the monarch's body.

It comes after York Council confirmed it was writing to the Queen and MoJ to lay claim to the remains of the last Plantagenet king.

In a statement, the MoJ said that, as part of its application for an exhumation licence, Leicester University had agreed the remains would be laid to rest at a suitable location no later than August 31, 2014.

It added: "The precise location of reburial is now for the University of Leicester."

However, city leaders in York are to write to the Queen and the MoJ in a bid to get the king returned to his "spiritual home".

The mayor of Leicester ,Sir Peter Soulsby said he could understand York's challenge but the decision had been made.

He said plans are in the early stages for a re-interment at Leicester Cathedral next year, just yards from the car park where the body of the king – who died at the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485 – was exhumed.