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阿拉里克一世(约 370-410 年)猝死:疟疾和免疫缺失导致的败亡。

The sudden death of Alaric I (c. 370-410AD), the vanquisher of Rome: A tale of malaria and lacking immunity.

机构信息

Institute of Evolutionary Medicine, University of Zurich, Winterthurerstrasse 190, 8057 Zurich, Switzerland.

Department of Public Health and Paediatric Sciences, Legal Medicine Section, Laboratory of Physical Anthropology, University of Turin, Corso Galileo Galilei 22, 10 126 Turin, Italy; Faculté de Médecine de Marseille, UMR 7268, Laboratoire d'Anthropologie bio-culturelle, Droit, Etique & Santé (Adés), France.

出版信息

Eur J Intern Med. 2016 Jun;31:84-7. doi: 10.1016/j.ejim.2016.02.020. Epub 2016 Mar 9.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Alaric I (c. 370-410AD), King of the Visigoths, sacked Rome for the second time in over eight centuries of history. Historians suggest that malaria, probably contracted either in Rome or in the Pontine Marshes, was responsible for his sudden death in Cosenza (Calabria) in the autumn of 410AD, where he was allegedly buried in the River Busento. In this article, we aim to examine this hypothesis through a full pathographic reassessment of the most likely cause of Alaric's demise.

METHODS

To achieve this, we resorted to a dual philological-medical approach: clinical likelihood and malaria seasonality coupled with primary historical sources (mainly Jordanes' work De origine actibusque Getarum) and the reconstruction of the itineraries followed by Alaric and his army after the sack of Rome.

RESULTS

Sudden death is caused by several factors. The possibility that Alaric died of a cardiovascular disease was discarded since no description of potentially pathological signs emerged from the available sources. Given his lack of semi-immunity, falciparum malaria was considered as the most likely cause of his demise. It took him over two months to reach the coasts of Calabria during the peak of malaria's transmission (summer-autumn). During the march, Alaric did not suffer from recurrent fevers or other ailments, which would have been reported by historians.

CONCLUSION

The scenario emerging from this multidisciplinary reanalysis allows us to hypothesise that Plasmodium falciparum malaria, contracted during his journey through Calabria, was the most likely candidate responsible for Alaric's unexpected demise.

摘要

背景

阿拉里克一世(公元 370-410 年),西哥特国王,在罗马 800 多年的历史上第二次洗劫了罗马。历史学家认为,疟疾可能是他在公元 410 年秋天在科森扎(卡拉布里亚)突然去世的原因,他据称被埋葬在布森托河。在本文中,我们旨在通过全面的病理重新评估来检验这一假设,以确定阿拉里克死亡的最可能原因。

方法

为了实现这一目标,我们采用了双重语文学-医学方法:临床可能性和疟疾季节性,结合主要的历史来源(主要是约丹尼斯的作品《哥特人的起源和行为》)以及阿拉里克及其军队在洗劫罗马后的行程重建。

结果

突然死亡是由多种因素引起的。阿拉里克死于心血管疾病的可能性被排除,因为从现有资料中没有出现可能的病理迹象的描述。鉴于他缺乏半免疫性,间日疟被认为是他死亡的最可能原因。他花了两个多月的时间才到达卡拉布里亚海岸,此时正是疟疾传播的高峰期(夏季-秋季)。在行军过程中,阿拉里克没有出现反复发作的发热或其他疾病,这些疾病本应被历史学家所报道。

结论

从这种多学科重新分析中出现的情况使我们能够假设,在他穿越卡拉布里亚的过程中感染的恶性疟原虫疟疾是导致阿拉里克意外死亡的最可能原因。

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