EditorialMar?a de las Mercedes of Orleans (1860-1878). Queen consort of Spain by her marriage to King Alfonso XII. She died shortly after her wedding as a result of typhoid fever. The queen in her mortuary bed. Drawing from life by Badillo. Engraving by Arturo ...
EditorialMercedes de Orleans (1860-1878). Qeen of Spain. First wife of King Alfonso XII. Death from Typhoid fever. Deathbed. Engraving by Arturo Carretero. La Ilustracion Espanola y Americana, 1878. Colored.
EditorialMercedes de Orleans (1860-1878). Queen of Spain. First wife of King Alfonso XII. Death from Typhoid fever. Deathbed. Engraving by Arturo Carretero. La Ilustracion Espanola y Americana, 1878.
EditorialA volunteer receives thumbs up before drinking a solution containing typhoid for a challenge trial at Churchill Hospital in Oxford, England, on Aug. 24, 2017. (Andrew Testa/The New York Times)
EditorialA volunteer receives thumbs up before drinking a solution containing typhoid for a challenge trial at Churchill Hospital in Oxford, England, on Aug. 24, 2017. (Andrew Testa/The New York Times)
EditorialDr. Paul Farmer, right, writes a prescription for a mother whose child was suffering from starvation in Cange, Haiti. (ángel Franco/The New York Times)
EditorialTHE NEW MARLBOROUGH BARRACKS, DUBLIN, Where Prince George of Wales was staying at the time when he is considered to have contracted the Typhoid Fever.
EditorialMercedes de Orleans (1860-1878). Qeen of Spain. First wife of King Alfonso XII. Death from Typhoid fever. Deathbed. Engraving by Arturo Carretero. La Ilustracion Espanola y Americana, 1878. Colored.
EditorialMercedes de Orleans (1860-1878). Queen of Spain. First wife of King Alfonso XII. Death from Typhoid fever. Deathbed. Engraving by Arturo Carretero. La Ilustracion Espanola y Americana, 1878.
EditorialTHE NEW MARLBOROUGH BARRACKS, DUBLIN, Where Prince George of Wales was staying at the time when he is considered to have contracted the Typhoid Fever.