“…KFS is a rare genetic disorder with an occurrence estimated at 1:40,000–50,000 live births (Wessell, DeRosa, Cherrick, & Sherman, ). Although since the first description of the syndrome by Maurice Klippel and Andre Feil in 1912 (Henneberg & Otocki, ) a wide range of reports concerning the occurrence of this syndrome has been presented in the clinical literature (e.g., Samartzis et al, ; Wessell et al, ), relatively few have been presented in publications about archaeological material (e.g., Ortner & Putschar, ) and only two cases of KFS were derived from Poland—one of which was diagnosed in the skeleton of a child (Marchewka, Borowska‐Strugińska, Czuszkiewicz, & Kliś, ) and the other involved the case where only two cervical vertebrae were preserved (Gładykowska‐Rzeczycka, ).…”