Confirmation the bones of Richard III had been discovered in a UK carpark was thrilling news for two Kiwi defenders of the monarch.
Deidre Drysdale, of Featherston, is the president, and Rob Smith, of Greytown, the secretary of the Richard III Society of New Zealand.
The society had joined its UK parent body and others around the world to support the University of Leicester in its dig for the King Richard III's bones.
The body discovered in a carpark last September was last week confirmed by DNA evidence as that of the fallen king, killed at the battle of Bosworth Field in 1485 after just two years on the throne.
Richard III was the last of the Plantaganet kings and was defeated by the first Tudor king, Henry VII.
The King Richard III Society UK was founded in 1924 as the Fellowship of the White Boar, a group of amateur historians who felt the king had been unfairly treated by history.