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Charcot Revisited
The Case of Bruegels Chorea
Geneviève Aubert, MD, PhD
Arch Neurol. 2005;62:155-161.
Since Jean-Martin Charcots time, Pieter Bruegel has been invoked as a famous contributor to the iconography of chorea. This is based not on a picture by Bruegel himself but on a 19th century engraving declared by Charcot to depict St Vitus dance or chorea germanorum, a form of mass hysteria. A search through the art history literature did not find chorea or St Vitus dance as a subject of any of Bruegels works. However, the picture presented by Charcot appeared to be based on a composition that features a pilgrimage of patients suffering from St Johns disease or falling sickness, one of the many names applied to epilepsy. This study traces the history of Charcots allusions to Bruegels picture and explores the little-known worksdrawings, engravings, and paintingsbased on Bruegels composition in the context of chorea, epilepsy, and hysteria. The conclusion of this study is that while Charcot ignored the precise details of Bruegels composition, his overall interpretation was correct. Beyond any specific diagnosis, Bruegels work remains universal, giving a unique and compelling picture of human suffering and of the plight of devoted caregivers.
Author Affiliation: Department of Neurology, Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc, Université Catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium.
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