Napoleon was sick to stomach for a long time back, suffering from a continual heaviness and a pain in the right side, doctors thought it was a liver disease, but he immediately suspected he was attacked in the same condition of his father, a Cirrus in the pylorus or stomach cancer, but never told anyone until he was sufficiently convinced that it was happening. However, recent research conducted on samples of hair from the general (cut shortly before he died) that had been stored in an empty envelope, reveal that they were impregnated with arsenic to the point, which is highly dangerous dose needed to achieve that concentration. This suggests that it is highly likely she could die from the poison (also be consistent with your symptoms), whether intentionally or not. Napoleon Bonaparte died on May 5, 1821. His last words were: "France, l'armée, Joséphine" (France, navy, Josefina) or, depending on the version of the memoirs of St. Helena ... ... armée tête ... Mon Dieu! ". He was 51.
Napoleon had stipulated in his testament the wish to be buried on the banks of the Seine, but he was buried in St. Helena. In 1840, at the request of the government of Louis Philippe, his remains were repatriated. Moved on the frigate Belle-Poule, placed in Les Invalides (Paris), the arrival of the remains of Napoleon was eagerly awaited in France. During his funeral sounded Mozart's Requiem. Hundreds of millions of people have visited his tomb since that date.
Napoleon in St. Helena

Napoleon in St. Helena
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario