Medical experts say composer Frederic Chopin's preserved heart bears signs of tuberculosis | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
Subscribe

Would you like to subscribe to our newsletter?

Current Conditions Mostly Cloudy  26.6°C

Medical experts say composer Frederic Chopin's preserved heart bears signs of tuberculosis

FILE - In this July 28, 2008 file photo a woman sits in front of the shrine where the heart of Polish-born composer Frederic Chopin rests in the Church of the Holy Cross, in Warsaw, Poland. Polish medical experts say Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2014, that the preserved heart of 19th century composer shows signs of tuberculosis and possibly some other lung disease. The findings seem to corroborate Chopin's 1849 death certificate which said that the Polish-born musician died at the age of 39 in Paris from TB. (AP Photo/Alik Keplicz, File)
Original Publication Date September 17, 2014 - 6:50 AM

WARSAW, Poland - The preserved heart of composer Frederic Chopin contains signs of tuberculosis and possibly some other lung disease, medical experts said Wednesday.

The findings seem to corroborate Chopin's 1849 death certificate, which said the Polish-born musician died at the age of 39 in Paris from TB.

He rests in Paris, but in keeping with a Romanticism-era practice his heart was brought to Warsaw, where he grew up, and is kept as a national relic inside a pillar at The Holy Cross Church. Held in two cases and a sealed crystal glass jar, it was inspected in April by forensic and genetic experts to check the state of the preservation.

One of them, geneticist Michal Witt, said the heart is "much enlarged, suggesting respiratory problems linked to a lung disease, and bears TB nodules."

He would not, however, speculate on what other disease the frail and frequently ailing Chopin could have suffered from. When Witt was seeking permission in 2008 to see the heart, he suggested that Chopin could have had cystic fibrosis, an incurable genetic disease.

Backing earlier speculation, forensic expert Tadeusz Dobosz, said the "colour of the preserving liquid suggests it can be cognac, the strongest alcohol known at the time," and also used for such purposes.

The experts said heart is " very well preserved," but they did not open the jar. They further sealed it with natural wax and suggested another inspection no sooner than in 2065.

Chopin is considered Poland's greatest composer, famous around the world for his piano concertos and other works for the piano.

He was born in 1810 in Zelazowa Wola, near Warsaw, to a Polish mother and a French father. At the age of 20 he left for Vienna and Paris, where he died on Oct. 17, 1849.

News from © The Associated Press, 2014
The Associated Press

  • Popular penticton News
  • Why Okanagan Lake doesn't freeze anymore
    Don Knox remembers not only skating on a glassy smooth Okanagan Lake as a young child, but also on a nicely frozen Mission Creek. “When we were kids – I can’t remember the
  • Judge locks bank accounts of Okanagan business owner, suspected drug supplier
    An Okanagan man suspected of using his car dealership and mortgages to hide drug money had his bank accounts frozen by a judge. He's one of three people included in the order as the prov
  • Where to get weird and exotic snacks in Kelowna
    Arabic malt energy drinks, protein Snickers bars, an edible Barbie dream house, Snoop Dogg chips; if any of those exotic snacks pique your interest there are places to get them in Kelowna. S
  • The free life — and lives — of Dag Aabye
    This feature first ran on iNFOnews in April of 2017. VERNON - For much of the year, home for Dag Aabye is a portable garden shed that he carried, in pieces, halfway up a mountain to a remo
  • Slippery slide: The decline of the Okanagan's waterslides
    They were once a mainstay of an Okanagan summer, where kids could burn off steam running back up the hill for another adrenaline-inducing ride down their favourite waterslide, while their parents
View Site in: Desktop | Mobile