ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 2月21日 13時52分


Until 1882, when the German physician and microbiologist Robert Koch identified the bacillus that causes tuberculosis, the disease was thought to be hereditary. Most urban populations in Europe and America were infected by the late 19th century. For roughly 80% of the patients who developed active tuberculosis, it proved fatal. Soon, hundreds of #sanatoriums opened in remote locations, all promising quarantined patients exceptionally fresh air and on-site specialists. The 60-plus years between the identification of tuberculosis’s cause and the discovery of its cure was, in retrospect, a sort of golden period for a very specific mode of #architecture, as well as a very specific way of life. While on assignment for @tmagazine, the photographer @fabricefouillet captured the Belle Epoque-style pool inside the spa of @victoriajungfrau in Interlaken, Switzerland. This 19th-century retreat was once considered one of Europe’s great grandes dames, visited by the likes of Emperor Dom Pedro II of Brazil and Mark Twain. Visit the link in our profile to go inside Europe’s sanatoriums.


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