Did King Herod suffer from a rheumatic disease?

被引:0
|
作者
Cianna Leatherwood
Richard S. Panush
机构
[1] University of Southern California and USC+LAC Medical Center,Department of Medicine, the Keck School of Medicine
[2] Brigham and Women’s Hospital,Department of Rheumatology
[3] University of Southern California and USC+LAC Medical Center,Division of Rheumatology, Department of Medicine, the Keck School of Medicine
来源
Clinical Rheumatology | 2017年 / 36卷
关键词
Art; Chronic lead intoxication; Herod; King Herod; Opera; Saturnine gout;
D O I
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摘要
Herod the Great was appointed “king of Jews,” to govern Judea, by the Roman Emperor and Senate. He lived from 73/74 BCE to 4 CE. He died with an illness and symptoms that have been the source of considerable speculation. Richard Strauss depicted Herod in his classic opera, “Salome.” That opera was derived from a play of the same name by Oscar Wilde, which was based on an 1876 painting, “Salome Dancing Before Herod,” by Gustave Moreau. The operatic Herod was afflicted with an illness characterized by dementia, hallucinations, paranoia, alcoholism (from drinking the Emperor’s wine), violence, twitches, and sterility; different interpretations showed him also with falls, chills, shaking, thirst, forgetfulness, and sleepiness, for which we suggest the novel diagnosis of chronic lead intoxication (which can manifest to rheumatologists as saturnine gout). He had compatible symptoms (encephalopathy and neuromuscular abnormalities) and consumed excessive quantities of imperial wine, known to be highly contaminated with lead and likely associated with similar symptoms among Roman aristocracy. Herod’s demented cruelties—an oppressive reign which including the beheading of John the Baptist—exacerbated the political climate and may have contributed to the subsequent violent 7-year revolt culminating in the destruction of the second temple. How different might history have been if Herod the Great had been abstemious?
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页码:741 / 744
页数:3
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