| Darrera modificació: 2023-10-20Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
 Barnhouse, Lucy, Hospitals in Communities of the Late Medieval Rhineland, Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press (Premodern Health, Disease, and Disability, 9), 2023, 250 pp. 
ResumFrom the mid-twelfth century onwards, the development of European hospitals was shaped by their claim to the legal status of religious institutions, with its attendant privileges and responsibilities. The questions of whom hospitals should serve and why they should do so have recurred — and been invested with moral weight — in successive centuries, though similarities between medieval and modern debates on the subject have often been overlooked. Hospitals' legal status as religious institutions could be tendentious and therefore had to be vigorously defended in order to protect hospitals' resources. This status could also, however, be invoked to impose limits on who could serve in and be served by hospitals. As recent scholarship demonstrates, disputes over whom hospitals should serve, and how, find parallels in other periods of history and current debates.
 Conté:
 Introduction
 Houses of God
 Civic Hospitals in the City and Archdiocese of Mainz
 Mainz's Hospital Sisters and the Rights of Religious Women
 Leprosaria and the Leprous: Legal Status and Social Ties
 “For all miserable persons”: Small and Extra-Urban Hospitals
 Hospitals and their Networks: Recreating Relationships
 Conclusion
 Bibliography
 
 Informació de l'editor
  MatèriesHospitalsHistòria de la medicina
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