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  1. Sir Augustus Frederick d'Este, KCH (13 January 1794 – 28 December 1848) was a relative of the British royal family and the earliest recorded person for whom a definite diagnosis of multiple sclerosis can be made.

  2. Sir Augustus Frederick D’Esté (1794–1848) was an illegitimate royal child, a bachelor, an active member of the Aborigines Protection Society, and the earliest known person diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.

  3. Oct 17, 2009 · The personal diary of Sir Augustus d’Esté, born 1794 grandson of King George III of England, reveals a medical history strongly suggesting that Augustus suffered from multiple sclerosis (MS). It could well be the first record of a person having this disease.

    • Anne Marie Landtblom, Patrik Fazio, Sten Fredrikson, Enrico Granieri
    • 2010
  4. Sir Augustus d’Este had met John Sunday, or Shawundais, the Methodist leader of the Mississauga on the northeastern shore of Lake Ontario, on his 1837 tour of Britain. Sunday came to raise money for the Methodist missionary work in Upper Canada, and to raise awareness of Indigenous land rights.

  5. Abstract. The personal diary of Sir Augustus d’Este ́, born 1794 grandson of King George III of England, reveals a medical history strongly suggesting that Augustus suffered from multiple sclerosis (MS). It could well be the first record of a person having this disease.

    • Anne Marie Landtblom, Patrik Fazio, Sten Fredrikson, Enrico Granieri
    • 2010
  6. The personal diary of Sir Augustus d'Esté, born 1794 grandson of King George III of England, reveals a medical history strongly suggesting that Augustus suffered from multiple sclerosis (MS).

  7. The first case history of multiple sclerosis: Augustus d’Esté (1794–1848) AbstractThe personal diary of Sir Augustus d’Esté, born 1794 grandson of King George III of England, reveals a medical history strongly suggesting that Augustus suffered from multiple sclerosis (MS).….