Friday, 21 May 2021

The 'What Killed Napoléon Bonaparte' debate,

has started again,


for some time the wallpaper was thought to be the culprit, but as we mark the 200th anniversary of his death on the island of St. Helena on May 5, 1821, a biochemist from De Montfort University in Leicester (United Kingdom) believes he has finally solved the mystery of what killed one of history’s most recognized figures, it was his love of cologne that killed him, asserts Parvez Haris, a professor of biomedical science at De Montfort’s School of Allied Health Sciences, according to Dr. Haris, Napoleon slowly poisoned himself to death over a number of years, by heavily and continuously using a type of men’s cologne that contained potentially toxic ingredients, professor Parvez Haris says Napoleon inadvertently poisoned himself by smothering himself daily in two to three bottles of perfume over many years, death by Eau De Cologne, that would look interesting on the death certificate!


No comments: