2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.jormas.2019.05.007
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The mandible of Saint-Louis (1270 AD): Retrospective diagnosis and circumstances of death

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Cited by 10 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…From the 12 th century, official authentication documents "authentique" accompanied the relics and allowed the traceability of their movements and modifications over time [4]. However, Charlier and colleagues [1] have not provided evidence of this original authentication with the mandible they examined. The authors state that "..a perfect traceability of the remains is given by historical sources" but provide no support for this assertion.…”
Section: Problems With Provenance and Methods Used For Authenticationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…From the 12 th century, official authentication documents "authentique" accompanied the relics and allowed the traceability of their movements and modifications over time [4]. However, Charlier and colleagues [1] have not provided evidence of this original authentication with the mandible they examined. The authors state that "..a perfect traceability of the remains is given by historical sources" but provide no support for this assertion.…”
Section: Problems With Provenance and Methods Used For Authenticationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are also issues with the osteological methods used by Charlier et al [1] to support their identification. The authors cite Parr et al [5] to justify the age and sex assigned to this individual.…”
Section: Problems With Provenance and Methods Used For Authenticationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Pour d’autres auteurs, Alexandre le Grand serait mort des suites d’un syndrome de Guillain-Barré apparu après une infection par Campylobacter pylori [3] . La mort de Louis IX à Tunis, le 25 août 1270, au cours de la 8 e croisade, a été attribuée d’abord à la peste, puis au typhus et tout récemment des études ont montré que sa mort serait due au scorbut [4] , [5] . Il faudra attendre le début du Moyen-Âge pour avoir quelques informations mais essentiellement factuelles [6] , [7] .…”
Section: Introductionunclassified