Who are some famous people in history who had retrospective diagnosis for their illnesses

Not famous himself, but made famous by his son’s acts, was Patrick Stewart’s father. He had a history of violence & depression following WWII which has now been diagnosed as PTSD, resulting in his son beginning to work with groups providing treatment for returning war veterans, in addition to the work he’s been doing for shelters for battered women.

And her mother was not abusive as was described in the book. It was a horrible breach of journalistic and medical ethics.

I have a book that says that the problems with the Tudor royalty, starting with Henry VIII, were probably caused by some form of syphilis.

On the hypothesis that he had syphilis & gave it to his wives, it could account for the numerous miscarriages that his wives had, the sickly nature of Edward VI, and Mary’s infertility & dementia.

There is a cottage industry of speculation about Mozart’s death

Also the pharaoh Akhenaten

I think Velikovsky’s nuttery can be safely ignored, but the other speculations are interesting.

Ernest Hemingway: hemochromatosis.

Jane Austen - probably Addison’s Disease.

Some medical historians believe that many of the people who had the Biblical “leprosy” actually had syphilis.

President Taft: sleep apnea and Type II diabetes.

Mental health reformer Clifford Beers and mid-century health reporter Paul de Kruif, author of “Microbe Hunters”, published in 1927 and still in print: Bipolar disorder, and how.

Nicola Tesla, the fellow who pretty much invented the technique used for multiple-phase transmission of electrical power, suffered from Obsessive Compusive Disorder. He could not enter a building without first walking around it three times, and had many other similiar odd habits. In his time, he was just thought of as “quirky.”

The Master theorizes about King Herod.

Edward VI - Tuberculosis

I thought it was acute lead poisoning that done him in, not iron poisoning.

He’s also believed to have had Asperger syndrome.

A more likely explanation is that he had a classic case of Parkinson’s disease, which would account for his rapid physical and mental deterioration after 1941, Dr Morrell’s “medications” notwithstanding. There is virtually no credible evidence that Hitler ever had illicit sex during his time in Vienna, while serving in WWI, or at any other point in his life (though some of the women he attached himself to, notably his niece Geli, did hint that he was capable of some pretty deviant acts).

Could he have had syphilis from birth?

What about biblical Abraham? What would compel a guy to climb a mountain with his infant son and come -this- close to snuffing him? Schizophrenia?

I’ve also often wondered what the lasting physiological and psychological effects of living the life of a Spartan were. PTSD for sure. Stress fractures of the bones were probably par for the course. What else?

Although there is a breast cancer lobby (I think its a weak case, from her letters there really isn’t anything breast cancerish about her symptoms. Notably, the biographer that believes this is a breast cancer survivor - I think its projection myself).

The aforementioned Alison Weir also postulates that Anne Boleyn was Rh negative - she had one healthy child, followed by miscarriages - including a son. If so, that would have been a root cause of her death - had that son come to term, its unlikely she would have been put to death (she may have been shipped off - she was also becoming a political liability).

Many, many, many odd habits, most of which are glossed over by the dewy-eyed worshippers. Margaret Cheney mentioned, rather charmingly, how he obsessively computed the cubic volume of food he ate. What she omits is that he also calculated his, uh, cubic output; it was an exercise in dietary efficiency. And nonsense, like almost everything in his life after about 1910.

There was a shade of green popular at the time that had arsenic as one if its main components. And it was apparently even more dangerous to remove said wallpaper.

I don’t actually have any entries of my own, I was just really excited that I knew about the wallpaper. :slight_smile:

What I read was that Dr. Morrell (who was a dermatologist) misinterpreted the results of the commonly used test for syphilis at that time. Hitler started going into shouting fits of rage, in late 1941 (when the German Army was tasting its first defeats in Russia). What is amazing-when Hitler took over supreme command of the armed forces, his top generals knew that he was incompetent - yet there was no will to remove him.

I’m reading The Last Place on Earth right now. I’m beginning to wonder whether Scott had severe bi-polar disorder.

Talk about “hair of the dog that bit you”.

Regards,
Shodan
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Bravo, sir. I will submit to you the bill for the cleaning of tea stains out of my shirt.