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Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
Mon Apr 16, 2018, 11:27 PM Apr 2018

Medieval Italian Man Replaced His Amputated Hand With a Knife

George Dvorsky
Today 3:05pm

Italian anthropologists have documented a remarkable case in which a Medieval-era Italian male not only managed to survive the amputation of his right hand, he also used a bladed weapon as a prosthetic limb.

Over 160 tombs have been excavated at the Longobard necropolis of Povegliano Veronese in Veneto, Northern Italy, but this skeleton, pulled from the ground in 1996, is entirely unique. Dated to between the 6th and 8th centuries, the specimen, dubbed T US 380, is an older male who survived long after the amputation of his right hand. But as new research published in Journal of Anthropological Sciences now shows, he replaced the missing appendage with a knife, which he attached to the stump with a cap, buckle, and leather straps. What’s more, dental analysis shows he tied it on with his teeth.

The updated analysis of the skeleton, led by anthropologist Ileana Micarelli from the University of Rome, suggests the man’s right hand was removed by a single blow. Many Longobard males were involved in warfare, so it’s possible he lost it during combat. It’s also possible that it was surgically removed as part of some medical intervention, or it may have been chopped off as a judicial form of punishment, a behavior known among the Medieval Italian Lombards.

Regardless of what happened, it’s clear from the paleontological evidence that T US 380 survived the amputation, and the injury healed rather nicely. In fact, he managed to live for a very long time afterwards. Micarelli and her colleagues say it’s a remarkable example of a human surviving the loss of a limb prior to the introduction of sterilization techniques and antibiotics. The case suggests the presence of community-level support and an environment in which intensive care and healing could take place. It also shows that Longobard medics, or whoever performed the procedure, knew a thing or two about preventing blood loss.

More:
https://gizmodo.com/medieval-italian-man-replaced-his-amputated-hand-with-a-1825296669

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Medieval Italian Man Replaced His Amputated Hand With a Knife (Original Post) Judi Lynn Apr 2018 OP
Knife-For-A-Hand Prosthesis Found With 1,400-Year-Old Skeleton Judi Lynn Apr 2018 #1
Hmm... Wednesdays Apr 2018 #2
I can see it now - Dateline 3000. airplaneman Apr 2018 #3
Somebody had to cut up his porkchops tirebiter Apr 2018 #4

Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
1. Knife-For-A-Hand Prosthesis Found With 1,400-Year-Old Skeleton
Mon Apr 16, 2018, 11:53 PM
Apr 2018

Aliyah Kovner
By Aliyah Kovner
12 APR 2018, 23:43

In the horror-camp classic Evil Dead II, the main character cuts off his own hand and later attaches a chainsaw in its place before he is magically transported to Middle Age Europe.

A case report by Italian archaeologists now implies that around 1,400 years ago, a real man pulled a (tenuously) similar stunt.

As described in the Journal of Anthropological Sciences, a skeleton unearthed from the famous Veneto-region Longobard cemetery bears evidence that the individual not only survived for years after amputation of his right forearm, he also regularly used a strapped-on, knife-tipped prosthesis.

No, really.

More:
http://www.iflscience.com/editors-blog/knifeforahand-prosthesis-found-with-1400yearold-skeleton/

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