"Traces of leprosy from the Czech Kingdom"@cs . "Strouhal, Eugen" . "1999-01-01+01:00"^^ . "10"^^ . "1-84171-434-8" . "Vargov\u00E1, Lenka" . "Traces of leprosy from the Czech Kingdom" . "14110" . . . "2"^^ . . "RIV/00216224:14110/02:00007828" . . . . "5"^^ . "University of Bradford" . . . . "Bradford (UK)" . . . . "Bradford (UK)" . . . . "Leprosy in the Medieval Czech Kingdom has yet to be thoroughly studied. Traces of the disease are, however, found in three independent data sources. Historical texts mention %22leper%22 houses in several towns, including the one adjacent to the St. Lazarus chapel outside the Old Town of Prague, operating from the mid-13th to the end of the 15th century AD. Iconographic evidence of facies leprosa and thickening of the toes have been recently recognized in one of the %22Three Apostles%22 from an anonymous painting dated AD 1510 in the National Galery in Prague. In addition, a male skull from an ossuary sample (n=554) at K\u0159tiny near Brno, displays osseous changes suggestive of the rhinomaxillary syndrome of leprosy. The diagnosis was confirmed by the isolation of Mycobacterium leprae DNA in a bone sample.This is the first osteoarchaeological evidence of leprosy published from the territory of the former Czech Kingdom." . "667189" . "Traces of leprosy from the Czech Kingdom"@en . "Leprosy in the Medieval Czech Kingdom has yet to be thoroughly studied. Traces of the disease are, however, found in three independent data sources. Historical texts mention %22leper%22 houses in several towns, including the one adjacent to the St. Lazarus chapel outside the Old Town of Prague, operating from the mid-13th to the end of the 15th century AD. Iconographic evidence of facies leprosa and thickening of the toes have been recently recognized in one of the %22Three Apostles%22 from an anonymous painting dated AD 1510 in the National Galery in Prague. In addition, a male skull from an ossuary sample (n=554) at K\u0159tiny near Brno, displays osseous changes suggestive of the rhinomaxillary syndrome of leprosy. The diagnosis was confirmed by the isolation of Mycobacterium leprae DNA in a bone sample.This is the first osteoarchaeological evidence of leprosy published from the territory of the former Czech Kingdom."@cs . "Hor\u00E1\u010Dkov\u00E1, Ladislava" . "Traces of leprosy from the Czech Kingdom" . "Leprosy in the Medieval Czech Kingdom has yet to be thoroughly studied. Traces of the disease are, however, found in three independent data sources. Historical texts mention %22leper%22 houses in several towns, including the one adjacent to the St. Lazarus chapel outside the Old Town of Prague, operating from the mid-13th to the end of the 15th century AD. Iconographic evidence of facies leprosa and thickening of the toes have been recently recognized in one of the %22Three Apostles%22 from an anonymous painting dated AD 1510 in the National Galery in Prague. In addition, a male skull from an ossuary sample (n=554) at K\u0159tiny near Brno, displays osseous changes suggestive of the rhinomaxillary syndrome of leprosy. The diagnosis was confirmed by the isolation of Mycobacterium leprae DNA in a bone sample.This is the first osteoarchaeological evidence of leprosy published from the territory of the former Czech Kingdom."@en . . "P(GA302/96/0236)" . "RIV/00216224:14110/02:00007828!RIV09-GA0-14110___" . "Traces of leprosy from the Czech Kingdom"@en . "Traces of leprosy from the Czech Kingdom"@cs . "[E82F9972248C]" . "Likovsk\u00FD, Jakub" . "Dane\u0161, Jan" . "The Past and Present of Leprosy" . "Leprosy; iconography; paleopathology; M. leprae; DNA"@en . . . .