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The Murder of Napoleon

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The book reveals a historical crime that has remained hidden for 160 years. Napoleon did not die of stomach cancer; he was poisoned with arsenic. This sensational work is based on the research of Swedish dentist and toxicologist Sten Forshufvud, who, while reading the memoirs of Napoleon's valet Louis Marchand, recognized that the exiled emperor's symptoms pointed to arsenic poisoning rather than stomach cancer. Forshufvud noted that some passages in the memoirs read like a textbook on toxic symptoms. The authors describe how and where Forshufvud ultimately found his evidence, how analyses confirmed his theory, and how he, with investigative acumen, even identified the murderer. The book reads more like a gripping detective novel than a dry history text, while also providing previously unknown insights into Napoleon's life on Saint Helena. Readers are drawn into the nearly impossible resolution of a mysterious case where the possibilities of modern forensic science triumph.

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The Murder of Napoleon, Ben Weider, David Hapgood

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
1982
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(Hardcover)
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Titel
The Murder of Napoleon
Sprache
Englisch
Verlag
CNIB
Erscheinungsdatum
1982
Einband
Hardcover
Reihe
Bewertung
3,95 von 5 Sternen
Beschreibung
The book reveals a historical crime that has remained hidden for 160 years. Napoleon did not die of stomach cancer; he was poisoned with arsenic. This sensational work is based on the research of Swedish dentist and toxicologist Sten Forshufvud, who, while reading the memoirs of Napoleon's valet Louis Marchand, recognized that the exiled emperor's symptoms pointed to arsenic poisoning rather than stomach cancer. Forshufvud noted that some passages in the memoirs read like a textbook on toxic symptoms. The authors describe how and where Forshufvud ultimately found his evidence, how analyses confirmed his theory, and how he, with investigative acumen, even identified the murderer. The book reads more like a gripping detective novel than a dry history text, while also providing previously unknown insights into Napoleon's life on Saint Helena. Readers are drawn into the nearly impossible resolution of a mysterious case where the possibilities of modern forensic science triumph.