Publication details

Some interesting findings in an abolished Brno cemetery in Antonínská street

Investor logo
Authors

VARGOVÁ Lenka HORÁČKOVÁ Ladislava MENŠÍKOVÁ Miroslava

Year of publication 2003
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Scripta Medica
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Field Archaeology, anthropology, ethnology
Keywords Syphilis; Tuberculosis; Inflammations; osteomyelitis
Description In 1999, skeletal remains of over a thousand individuals were recovered during preservation archaeological research at Antonínská Street in Brno. This extensive osteological set comes from the former city cemetery at Malá Nová, which was used as the burial place for people from five Brno districts between 1785 and 1883. An anthropological and paleopathological analysis of the skeletons revealed traces of the post mortem opening of the cranial cavity on ten skulls found there (four men, three women and three children). In all the cases, the calvarias were removed by means of a typical cut through the glabella, squamosal bones and the protuberantia occipitalis externa. The execution of the cut clearly points to pathological or anatomical autopsies. In Brno, the first official autopsies were performed in 1871 at the dissecting room of the Provincial public general hospital at Pekařská Street (now Faculty Hospital St. Ann). The first head of the Department of Pathology was Eduard Klenka z Vlastimilů, who equipped his laboratory in line with modern principles of the renowned Viennese pathologist of Czech origin Karel Rokitanský. According to reports from that time, a total of 53 corpses (32 men and 20 women ) were delivered to the laboratory in the first year of its operation. Post mortem were performed on 35 of them. The most frequent causes of death at that time included infectious diseases, particularly tuberculosis, syphilisis, smallpox and typhus fever. The skeletal remains with traces of autopsy reported here are among the oldest evidence of post mortem performed in Moravia, and, together with similar findings from the cemetery at the St. Kliment church in Prague, they give us a better insight into the level of development of the medical science in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Related projects:

You are running an old browser version. We recommend updating your browser to its latest version.

More info