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Who killed Napoleon?

Tulard Jean, Lucotte Gérard, Bornet Philippe
Publication date 04/11/2024
EAN: 9782315021703
Availability Available from publisher
"Let the muse of History be silent, and make way for Genetics" Jean Tulard"Fascinating". Prof. Jean-Noël Fabiani, Professor Emeritus at the Chair of the History of Medicine. Until recent years, many mysteries and rumors have surrounded Napoleon: Was ... See full description
Attribute nameAttribute value
Common books attribute
PublisherMAX MILO
Page Count-
Languageen
AuthorTulard Jean, Lucotte Gérard, Bornet Philippe
FormatBook
Product typeBook
Publication date04/11/2024
Weight238 g
Dimensions (thickness x width x height)1.70 x 14.50 x 20.50 cm
10 new scientific investigations to rescue history
"Let the muse of History be silent, and make way for Genetics" Jean Tulard"Fascinating". Prof. Jean-Noël Fabiani, Professor Emeritus at the Chair of the History of Medicine. Until recent years, many mysteries and rumors have surrounded Napoleon: Was Napoleon's body taken by the British and placed in Westminster Abbey? Was he murdered and poisoned with arsenic? Did he die of hereditary stomach cancer, as the English claimed, or of the hepatitis and dysentery rampant on this insalubrious island? Was Napoleon III a descendant of the Emperor? And even, did the Emperor's physician remove Napoleon's penis after his death on St. Helena in 1821?To answer these and many other questions, Professor Gérard Lucotte has spent twelve years working on this subject. He was commissioned by Prince Charles Napoleon (descendant of the emperor through the branch of Jérôme Bonaparte, the emperor's younger brother) and Count Walewski (descendant of Napoleon I's natural son) to work on Napoleon's DNA. Thanks to his electron microscope, he has achieved a gigantic feat that will astound all Napoleon enthusiasts. Gérard Lucotte is Professor at the Paris School of Anthropology and Director of the Institute of Anthropology and Molecular Genetics. He is a specialist in ancient DNA and internationally renowned for the sequencing of the Y chromosome. He is the author of hundreds of scientific articles.Philippe Bornet, former lecturer at the Chair of History of Medicine. Diploma in Internal Medicine and Ophthalmology.