TY - JOUR KW - Avar period KW - leprosy KW - Macromorphological disease manifestations KW - Palaeopathology KW - Social Stigma KW - Trans-Tisza region AU - Tihanyi B AU - Samu L AU - Koncz I AU - Hergott K AU - Medgyesi P AU - Pálfi G AU - Szabó K AU - Kis L AU - Marcsik A AU - Molnár E AU - Spekker O AB -

Our knowledge of how society viewed leprosy and treated its victims in the past is still scarce, especially in geographical regions and archaeological periods from where no written sources are available. To fill in some research gaps, we provide the comparative analysis of five previously described, probable cases with leprosy from the Avar-period Trans-Tisza region (Hungary). The five skeletons were subject to a detailed macromorphological (re-)evaluation. Where possible, the biological and social consequences of having leprosy were reconstructed based on the observed bony changes and mortuary treatment, respectively. The retrospective, macromorphology-based diagnosis of leprosy could be established in three cases only. Based on the detected skeletal lesions, all of them suffered from near-lepromatous or lepromatous leprosy. The disease resulted in aesthetic repercussions and functional implications, which would have been disadvantageous for these individuals, and limited or changed their possibilities to participate in social situations. They could have even required heavy time investment from their respective communities. The analysis of the mortuary treatment of the confirmed leprosy cases revealed no evidence of a social stigma. These findings indicate that the afflicted have not been systematically expulsed or segregated, at least in death, in the Early Middle Ages of the Carpathian Basin.

BT - Tuberculosis (Edinburgh, Scotland) C1 - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/39142093 DA - 07/2024 DO - 10.1016/j.tube.2024.102552 J2 - Tuberculosis (Edinb) LA - ENG M3 - Article N2 -

Our knowledge of how society viewed leprosy and treated its victims in the past is still scarce, especially in geographical regions and archaeological periods from where no written sources are available. To fill in some research gaps, we provide the comparative analysis of five previously described, probable cases with leprosy from the Avar-period Trans-Tisza region (Hungary). The five skeletons were subject to a detailed macromorphological (re-)evaluation. Where possible, the biological and social consequences of having leprosy were reconstructed based on the observed bony changes and mortuary treatment, respectively. The retrospective, macromorphology-based diagnosis of leprosy could be established in three cases only. Based on the detected skeletal lesions, all of them suffered from near-lepromatous or lepromatous leprosy. The disease resulted in aesthetic repercussions and functional implications, which would have been disadvantageous for these individuals, and limited or changed their possibilities to participate in social situations. They could have even required heavy time investment from their respective communities. The analysis of the mortuary treatment of the confirmed leprosy cases revealed no evidence of a social stigma. These findings indicate that the afflicted have not been systematically expulsed or segregated, at least in death, in the Early Middle Ages of the Carpathian Basin.

PY - 2024 SP - 1 EP - 19 T2 - Tuberculosis (Edinburgh, Scotland) TI - A glimpse into the past of Hansen's disease - Re-evaluation and comparative analysis of cases with leprosy from the Avar period of the Trans-Tisza region, Hungary. UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1472979224000787/pdfft?md5=68a1f057b3b4b6cf8b126d76664314ee&pid=1-s2.0-S1472979224000787-main.pdf VL - 148 SN - 1873-281X ER -