Attila the Hun died of a nosebleed on his wedding night. |
Famous Figures |
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Attila had no visible wounds; according to an account from Byzantine historian Priscus (a diplomat who had dined with Attila), the Hunnic leader had choked to death on his own blood after suffering a drunken nosebleed. Though some later theories suspected Ildico of foul play, and others thought Marcian was somehow behind it, no proof has ever emerged for either theory. Attila is far from the only world leader to depart this mortal coil under strange circumstances, of course. King Adolf Frederick of Sweden ate himself to death after consuming everything from lobster and caviar to champagne and a sweet roll called "semla." Greece's King Alexander I, meanwhile, was done in by an infected monkey bite, and Greek philosopher Chrysippus is thought to have died of laughter after seeing a donkey eat his figs. | |
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Attila killed his own brother to become sole leader. | |||||||||
Attila and his brother Bleda became joint leaders of the Hunnic Empire in 434 CE upon the deaths of their uncles Octar and Rugila, an arrangement that initially suited Attila fine. Historian and author Michael Lee Lanning wrote that the siblings "valued agreements little and peace even less" and "resumed the Hun offensive against Rome and anyone else who stood in their way" as soon as they assumed their shared throne. Though the specifics of what changed aren't entirely known, according to Priscus, "Bleda, king of the Huns, was assassinated as a result of the plots of his brother Attila." Attila reigned for more than a decade on his own until his strange, untimely end. | |||||||||
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