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It wasn't the killer, it was the element.
CZ🏛️ Politics4 days ago

It wasn't the killer, it was the element.

Two prominent figures of Renaissance Italy, Giovanni and Francesco de Medici, died from malaria, according to a study analyzing their remains. Previously, there were speculations about arsenic poisoning, but new research confirms that both brothers succumbed to malaria caused by previously unknown strains of the parasite Plasmodium falciparum. The study highlights the historical impact of malaria during the Renaissance and provides valuable insights into the disease's evolution. Giovanni, born with a diamond-studded golden spoon, was a cardinal who died at 19, while his older brother Francesco, destined to inherit the Medici family's power, also died from malaria. The findings challenge earlier theories of assassination and emphasize the deadly nature of malaria, which remained a major health threat until the 20th century.

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ČT24 logoČT24State / PublicCenterFactual 85Objective 704 days ago
It wasn't the killer, it was the element.

Two prominent figures of Renaissance Italy, Giovanni and Francesco de Medici, died from malaria, according to a study analyzing their remains. Previously, there were speculations about arsenic poisoning, but new research confirms that both brothers succumbed to malaria caused by previously unknown strains of the parasite Plasmodium falciparum. The study highlights the historical impact of malaria during the Renaissance and provides valuable insights into the disease's evolution. Giovanni, born with a diamond-studded golden spoon, was a cardinal who died at 19, while his older brother Francesco, destined to inherit the Medici family's power, also died from malaria. The findings challenge earlier theories of assassination and emphasize the deadly nature of malaria, which remained a major health threat until the 20th century.

Bias read (Center): The article presents scientific findings without overt ideological framing. It focuses on historical medical analysis rather than contemporary political issues, and the content is balanced, presenting facts and previous speculation without clear bias toward any political stance.

Why these scores (Factual 85 · Objective 70): The article presents a study confirming malaria as the cause of death for Renaissance Medici figures, aligning with cross-source consensus. However, it includes some speculative language like 'spekulovalo o vraždě' and emphasizes the significance of the findings more than the scientific process. The

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