Philippe Charlier is a French coroner, forensic pathologist and paleopathologist.
He made his first dig at the age of 10, when he found a human skull.
He studied archaeology and art history at the Michelet Institute and was part of the forensic department at Raymond Poincaré University Hospital.
[2][3] Charlier's work has focused on the remains of Richard Lionheart, Agnès Sorel, Fulk III, Count of Anjou, Diane de Poitiers, relics of Louis IX scattered in France, false relics of Joan of Arc, and the presumed head of Henry IV.
[4][5] In 2017, he reconfirmed the authenticity of Adolf Hitler's dental remains, the only remains of the Nazi dictator confirmed to have been found.