Emile Littré and the death of Alexander the Great

The French philologist Émile Littré (1801-1881) is credited by several scholars as the first to propose that Alexander the Great died of malaria. This article demonstrates that this opinion of traditional origin is unsupported by Littré's scholarly production. He published only two full papers...

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Main Author: Ernesto Damiani
Format: Article
Language:ell
Published: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2024-12-01
Series:Karanos
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistes.uab.cat/karanos/article/view/116
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author Ernesto Damiani
author_facet Ernesto Damiani
author_sort Ernesto Damiani
collection DOAJ
description The French philologist Émile Littré (1801-1881) is credited by several scholars as the first to propose that Alexander the Great died of malaria. This article demonstrates that this opinion of traditional origin is unsupported by Littré's scholarly production. He published only two full papers on the topic of Alexander's death, the first in 1844 and the latter in 1853. In both works he stated that Alexander died of a pseudo-continuous fever, that is, a long lasting fever characterized by initial phases of remission to become continuous at the end. This feverish pattern differed from that of intermittent fever of malarial type that Littré described in his medical Dictionary. The articles of 1865, 1872 and 1927 were reprints of the 1853 article. The 1927 version published in Æsculape was preceded by a preface in which the anonymous author arbitrarily introduced the new word “paludisme”, giving rise to the erroneous belief that has been handed down to date.
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spelling doaj-art-f16280af3a6c437d90e22853bc995c9f2025-01-04T03:13:04ZellUniversitat Autònoma de BarcelonaKaranos2604-61992604-35212024-12-01710.5565/rev/karanos.116Emile Littré and the death of Alexander the GreatErnesto Damiani0University of Padova, Department of Biomedical sciences The French philologist Émile Littré (1801-1881) is credited by several scholars as the first to propose that Alexander the Great died of malaria. This article demonstrates that this opinion of traditional origin is unsupported by Littré's scholarly production. He published only two full papers on the topic of Alexander's death, the first in 1844 and the latter in 1853. In both works he stated that Alexander died of a pseudo-continuous fever, that is, a long lasting fever characterized by initial phases of remission to become continuous at the end. This feverish pattern differed from that of intermittent fever of malarial type that Littré described in his medical Dictionary. The articles of 1865, 1872 and 1927 were reprints of the 1853 article. The 1927 version published in Æsculape was preceded by a preface in which the anonymous author arbitrarily introduced the new word “paludisme”, giving rise to the erroneous belief that has been handed down to date. https://revistes.uab.cat/karanos/article/view/116Émile LittréAlexander the Greatmalaria hypothesispseudo-continuous fever
spellingShingle Ernesto Damiani
Emile Littré and the death of Alexander the Great
Karanos
Émile Littré
Alexander the Great
malaria hypothesis
pseudo-continuous fever
title Emile Littré and the death of Alexander the Great
title_full Emile Littré and the death of Alexander the Great
title_fullStr Emile Littré and the death of Alexander the Great
title_full_unstemmed Emile Littré and the death of Alexander the Great
title_short Emile Littré and the death of Alexander the Great
title_sort emile littre and the death of alexander the great
topic Émile Littré
Alexander the Great
malaria hypothesis
pseudo-continuous fever
url https://revistes.uab.cat/karanos/article/view/116
work_keys_str_mv AT ernestodamiani emilelittreandthedeathofalexanderthegreat