The hero of the American Revolutionary War, Kazimir Pulaski, was a woman or a bisexual, according to a documentary to be broadcast on Monday.

The Polish-born general was credited with saving George Washington's life during the war between Britain and Britain between 1775-83, known as the "father of the American cavalry."

Pulaski went to the United States to volunteer for combat, and was known for his extraordinary courage in combat, as well as having very special features. He was difficult to see and had no desire for women or alcohol.

Researchers first discovered the Pulaski genus 20 years ago, when a memorial to the general in Savannah, Georgia, and the extraction of the Pulaski bones were dismantled.

Charles Merbes, a forensic anthropologist at the time at Arizona State University, studied the Pulaski bones with the participation of Karen Burns, a scientist of physical anthropology.

"Dr. Burns told me before I entered 'Enter and do not come out loud,'" she told the university in an article published this week. "She said I study it very carefully and thoroughly and then let's sit down and discuss it. I immediately entered and saw what she was talking about. "

"The skeleton is almost like what a female can have."

At the time, although the bones of a female relative of Pulaski were being traced, researchers did not have DNA techniques that could conclusively prove that the bones in the monument belong to Pulaski.

However, last year, three researchers at Arizona State University took up the case again - and were able to match the mitochondrial DNA between both Polaski and his sister's granddaughter.

The documentary "America's hidden stories: The Gen was a Woman?" On Monday on the American channel Smithsonian.

Pulaski was seriously wounded in the battle of 1779 in Savannah and died days later. President Donald Trump issued a statement last year, in which he announced on October 11 the anniversary of General Pulaski.

Other features of the skeleton, including height, age and general body structure, correspond to what researchers know of Pulaski.

An image painted for Polanski during his lifetime shows a black spot beneath his left eye. "There is a bone defect in the skull exactly in this area," says Merbes.

It was known that the general had injured his right hand in a battle in Russia - and appears in the skeleton recovered from a fracture injury in the right hand.
"Now we know that the bones in the monument belong to Polaski, but we have a real problem with being a female," Merbes said.