International audienceThe skeletons of four Benedictine nuns and two priests were exhumed from two burial sites in central<br />France. The corpses were dated to the 16th- 18th centuries (archaeological dating). Thick layers of lime were associated with their burials. During the Second Plague Pandemic, lime was associated with plague burials. We hypothesize that Yersinia pestis infection might have been the cause of death of these religious. A rapid diagnostic test for plague (RDT), that detects Y. pestis F1 antigen, was applied to all six putative plague victims. Y. pestis F1 antigen was detected in all six skeletons (100%). The F1 antigen concentrations ranged from 2.5 to 0.625 ng/ml. The eight samples used as negative controls yielded ne...