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In happier times, the room had been used for receiving dignitaries who visited the Duke's mother, Luisa Isabel Álvarez de Toledo. Celebrated as the "Red Duchess," Luisa Isabel was a socialist-minded, fascism-battling aristocrat beloved by ordinary Spaniards. In 1955, only 18 years old and already pregnant with Leoncio, Luisa Isabel married José Leoncio González de Gregorio, a nobleman from Soria. After giving birth to Gabriel, family lore has it that she handed him to the nurses and declared she had fulfilled her role as a woman. "Someone in the household said she was our mother," Gabriel recalls.
Persons: Leoncio Alonso González de Gregorio y Álvarez, Duke of, Duke, Francisco Pacheco, Luisa Isabel Álvarez de, Duchess, Luisa Isabel, I'm, Leoncio, Christopher Columbus, who'd, Francisco Franco, Pilar, Gabriel, Liliane Dahlmann, Luisa Isabel's, Flouting, Liliane, José Leoncio González de Gregorio, José, Spanish armadas, Franco's, Simone de Beauvoir, Franco, Nate Sweitzer, Julia Franco, José Leoncio, Sid Vicious, Miguel, El, Arenas, sequester, Columbus, Juan Luis Albentosa, Diego Velázquez, , , Sidonia, Alfonso Maura, Andres Martinez, , María, Capi Arenas, “ I’ve, Duke of Montalto, King Juan Carlos I, Gabriel . The, Hernán Cortés, He'd, Íñigo Ramírez de Haro, Leoncio wasn't, Leoncio Alonso wasn't, Duke of Medina, Eduardo Ferreiro, Leoncio's, Viñamata, Spain's, Slim, Thomas Piketty, It's, I've, he'll, Javier Timmermans, she's, Gregorio Palace, Barrameda, they'd, Matthew Bremner Organizations: YouTube, Andalusians, BI, Historians, Franciscan, Frontera, Columbus, Spanish National Heritage Board, Casa, Foundation, BI Pilar Locations: Toledo, Duke of Medina Sidonia, Spain, Luisa Isabel Álvarez de Toledo, Medina, Sidonia, America, Europe, Soria, Spanish, Pilar, Paris, Madrid, Sanlúcar, American, Palomares, France, El Pais, Murcia, Palos de, Catalonian, María Montserrat, Germany, Barcelona, Aragon, Fernandina, Casa Medina, Montserrat, Medina Sidonia
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Climate change may be driving the rapid spread of Candida auris, a deadly fungus, across the US. Three charts show how extreme weather and environmental changes help spread disease. Nicolas Armer/picture alliance via Getty ImagesA leading theory on this fungus's sudden emergence and wide spread is that it's fueled by climate change. Whatever survives, however, is adapted to extreme heat — including the fever our bodies produce to kill off pathogens. David Ryder/Getty ImagesHumans and their infrastructure are more vulnerable to the devastating impacts of disease when they're compromised by extreme weather.
A new study shows extreme weather, ocean changes, and land disruption have already helped spread more than 200 pathogens. That's an extreme case of climate change creating new contact between humans and infectious diseases, but the phenomenon is widespread. Extreme heat waves, for example, can kill off many infectious viruses, bacteria, fungi, and the creatures that spread them. Whatever survives, however, is adapted to extreme heat — including the fever our bodies produce to kill off pathogens. David Ryder/Getty ImagesHumans and their infrastructure are more vulnerable to the devastating impacts of disease when they're compromised by extreme weather.
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