Wednesday, January 30, 2019

NEW ZEALAND EXPERTS CLAIM TO KNOW
WHAT KILLED ALEXANDER THE GREAT



FORGET strychnine, arsenic and a malingering fever ... two rival New Zealand experts have come up with two rival theories as to the cause of the mysterious 12-day death of Alexander the Great.

A rare auto-immune disease destroyed his body from the inside, according to one of the New Zealanders ...  Dr Katherine Hall, of the Dunedin School of Medicine in New Zealand.

He remained alive and conscious but unable to move his limbs, causing his doctors to marvel at the way his body failed to decompose even after they pronounced him dead.

"His death may be the most famous case of pseudothanatos, or false diagnosis of death, ever recorded," Dr. Hall says.

But her theory follows a claim by another New Zealand researcher in 2014 that Alexander's mysterious death may have been due to an herbal emetic which some perfidious person fermented to create toxic wine, according to a scientist.

Classical scholars have been deeply divided about what killed the Macedonian leader, who built a massive empire before his death, aged 32, in June of 323 BC.

Some accounts say he died of natural causes but others suggested members of his inner circle conspired to poison him at a celebratory banquet.

Dr Hall says Alexander’s symptoms match up with the brain disorder Guillain-Barré Syndrome (GBS).

But Dr Leo Schep, a scientist in New Zealand who has been researching the toxicological evidence for a decade, says the most likely culprit was Veratrum album, known as white hellebore.

The white-flowered plant, which can be fermented into a poisonous wine, was well-known to the Greeks as a herbal treatment for inducing vomiting.

Crucially, it could have accounted for the 12 torturous days that Alexander took to die, speechless and unable to walk.

Other suggested poisons ... including hemlock, aconite, wormwood, henbane and autumn crocus .. would likely have killed him far more quickly.

And some of the poisoning theories ... including arsenic and strychnine ... were laughable. Death would have come far too fast, he said.

His research, co-authored by Otago University classics expert Dr Pat Wheatley, has been published in the medical journal Clinical Toxicology.

Dr Schep began looking into the mystery in 2003 when he was approached by a company working on a BBC documentary.

"They asked me to look into it for them and I said, 'Oh yeah, I'll give it a go, I like a challenge' ... thinking I wasn't going to find anything. And to my utter surprise, and their surprise, we found something that could fit the bill."


Dr Schep's theory is that Veratrum album could have been fermented as a wine that was given to the leader. It would have ... tasted "very bitter" but it could have been sweetened with wine ... and Alexander was likely to have been very drunk at the banquet.

But whether Alexander was poisoned is still a mystery. "We'll never know really ... "

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