Renaissance nuns wiped out by plague

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29054365/


Study: Religious orders in France lost lives providing medical care for poor

Image: skeleton


This collage of images shows the remains and burial sites of some 
religious order members who died of plague in Renaissance Europe, 
along with a photo illustrating "the plague dipstick test" used to 
confirm the presence of the bacteria.
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29054935/displaymode/1176/rstry/29054365/>
[]
  <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29054935/displaymode/1176/rstry/29054365/>View 
related photos
Raffaella Bianucci, Gallien/INRA
Discovery.com

By Jennifer Viegas

updated 12:11 p.m. ET, Fri., Feb. 6, 2009

Nuns and priests sacrificed their own lives to provide medical care 
for the poor in Renaissance France, according to a new study that 
implicates exposure to contagious plague victims in the deaths of 
several religious order members.

The study is among the first to find that plague, a deadly bacterial 
disease also known as 
<http://history.howstuffworks.com/middle-ages/black-death.htm>"the 
Black Death," can be quickly and accurately identified in ancient 
human remains.

Several recently identified women who died after caring for plague 
victims were all Benedictine nuns from the Sainte-Croix Abbey's 
chapter house near Poitiers, France.

"The Abbess [Mother Superior] of Sainte-Croix was known to be an 
extremely generous person who spent all of her life looking after the 
poor," lead author Raffaella Bianucci told Discovery News.

Bianucci, an anthropologist in the Department of Animal and Human 
Biology at the University of Turin, added that the woman was the 
Countess Charlotte Flandrina of Nassau, the fourth daughter of Prince 
William I of Orange. When the countess became a 
<http://health.howstuffworks.com/10-medical-mysteries-20081.htm>Roman 
Catholic nun, she sold most of her valuables to pay for food and 
medical care for the region's poor, many of whom caught the plague 
from soldiers fighting in the Thirty Years War.

"There is evidence of food distribution to the people, and it seems 
that laymen had free access to the convent's infirmary," Bianucci said.

Historical accounts suggest that nuns caring for the plague victims 
succumbed to the disease sometime between 1628 and 1632. At that 
time, General Vicar Jean Filleau ordered the remaining nuns to leave 
the cloister and retreat to a seaside residence.

With funding from Compagnia di San Paolo, Bianucci and her team 
analyzed skeletons of Saint-Croix Abbey nuns whose corpses were found 
resting on layers of the disinfectant calcium oxide, or lime.

The researchers applied an "RDT dipstick test" to the bones and 
teeth. Similar to a home pregnancy test, the "dipstick" changes color 
if it detects the presence of markers for Yersinia pestis, the 
bacteria that causes plague.

The nuns tested positive for the deadly infection, according to the 
study, which will be published in the March issue of the Journal of 
Archaeological Science.

The scientists also performed the test on priests buried near the 
altar of Saint-Nicolas' Church in La Chaize-le-Vicomte, in central 
France. The priests also tested positive.

Although historical records are less clear about the priests' contact 
with local plague victims, Bianucci said the men must have been 
around "the parishioners, as their ministry required, and certainly 
assisted people who were dying," such as by administering last rights.

"It will be most interesting to see it (the plague dipstick test) 
applied to a wide array of tissues of varying ages in the future," 
said Arthur Aufderheide, director of the Paleobiology Laboratory at 
the University of Minnesota's Medical School, Duluth Campus.


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