Kapronczay Károly szerk.: Orvostörténeti közlemények 234-237. (Budapest, 2016)

TANULMÁNYOK - Botlik Richárd—Nemes István—Tolvaj Balázs: Kétségeink II. (Jagelló) Lajos cseh- és magyar király (1506-1526) holttestének azonosításával kapcsolatban

BOTLIK R. - NEMES I. - TOLVAJ B.: Kétségeink II. Lajos holttestének azonosításával kapcsolatban 21 SUMMARY The coalitioned man-at-arms batallion of Louis II (1516-1526) King of Bohemia and Hunga­ry had crushing defeated by overwhelmingly Turk army of Suleiman (1520-1566) the Magnif­icent at close to Mohács on 29 August 1526. Louis II and his trusty servant, István Aczél es­caped from the losing battle, but both of them drowned into a brook (perhaps a local stream, named Csele) or a swampy fishpond. The one of the Bohemian noble, Ulrich Czettritz von Neuhaus royal court chamberlain was the single eyewitness of this luckless misadventure, furthermore - according to his first verbal report - he failed to help to the King from the sludge. The same Czettritz identified the King’s dead body on the spot on 18 October of 1526, but the King’s corpse turned up from a newly dug sepulchral mound instead of water, swamp or any kind of original surface. Ferenc Sárffy (royal castle head of Győr) joined to Czettritz’s scene investigation and Sárffy reported István Brodarics Chancellor about the case on 19 Oc­tober 1526. The details of royal corpse identification is well-known from the copy of Sárffy’s letter, which one has been preserve at Poland. According to the Sárffy’s report the corpse of Louis II was taintless, in spite of the royal dead body spent underground circa 50 days and un­known persons previously removed it. In our opinion it would have been decompose because of late autodigestion or adipoceration. So if Sárffy’s report is right about the undamaged condition of corpse, it must not Louis’ dead body. It could not excluded that Ferenc Sárffy deliberately embellished the truth. Nevertheless Louis was not buried by Ulrich Czettritz or Maria Habsburg — Louis’ widow, who sent Czettritz to the corpse identification —, or Maria’s brother Ferdinand Archduke of Austria, who aspirated to the throne. Point of interest that fi­nally the King’s funeral was made by John Szapolya vaivoda of Transylvania, who occupied with his army the crowning city (named Székesfehérvár), because he aspirated to the throne also and he was a politician on the other side of the fence. The ceremonial funeral became on 9 November 1526, when the royal body was dead for 72 days. This is the reason why we have been sceptical about Louis’ corpse was in suitable condition for the procession of burial, where some important Hungarian people surely inspected him and nobody failed to notice that the King’s body had had signs of advanced decompose. In our opinion - considering that date of the scene investigation, then circumstances of the medical examination, finally Czet­tritz was not a skilled doctor - could be 66 percent chances that Czettritz and Sárffy should not found the corpse of Louis II. An English document proves our statement. Thomas Wolsey Chancellor, Archbishop of York wrote a letter to Henry VIII King of England from Westmin­ster on 23 October 1526. The Chancellor informed Henry VIII in this document about the founding and burying process of Louis II. Out of consideration for the distance between of England and Hungary, the news could not arrive from Győr (Sárffy reported Brodarics on 19 October) to London (Wolsey reported Henry VIII on 23 October) within four days, because other letters, news and reports were coming 3 or 4 weeks delay. Our conclusions that Louis’ corpse was finding at least 3 or 4 weeks before the scene investigation of Czettritz and Sárffy. Accordingly the corpse which was found on 18 October it should neither the King’s body nor Louis’ corpse was buried at Székesfehérvár on 9 November 1526.

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