Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Houses of God
- 2 Civic Hospitals in the City and Archdiocese of Mainz
- 3 Mainz’s Hospital Sisters and the Rights of Religious Women
- 4 Leprosaria and the Leprous: Legal Status and Social Ties
- 5 “For all miserable persons”: Small and Extra-Urban Hospitals
- 6 Hospitals and their Networks: Recreating Relationships
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 February 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Houses of God
- 2 Civic Hospitals in the City and Archdiocese of Mainz
- 3 Mainz’s Hospital Sisters and the Rights of Religious Women
- 4 Leprosaria and the Leprous: Legal Status and Social Ties
- 5 “For all miserable persons”: Small and Extra-Urban Hospitals
- 6 Hospitals and their Networks: Recreating Relationships
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Abstract
The introduction situates this monograph in relation to the historiography, identifies the archival documents on which it relies, and lays out its argument. I aim to show how legal status was debated and utilized by hospital communities, ecclesiastical and civic authorities, and, not least, the laity who were the donors and neighbors, and sometimes the administrators, of urban and periurban hospitals. Hospitals’ entitlement to the legal privileges of religious status, and their subjection to ecclesiastical jurisdiction, were tendentious questions. This fueled the needs of hospitals to assert and defend their legal rights, but also enabled negotiation of their institutional identity. This book argues that the canon law governing hospitals served as an engine of their late medieval development.
Keywords: canon law, medieval history, urban history, religious houses
Today, the Heilig Geist in Mainz is an airy restaurant, a few blocks away from the Rhine. For centuries, however, this building, located between the cathedral and the city hall, was devoted to the care of the sick. The earliest list of those who resided in Mainz's oldest hospital dates to 1487, two decades after the hospital had been returned to the control of the cathedral chapter in the aftermath of a bitter dispute over the archiepiscopal see. The hospital master and the chaplain are listed first, followed by Peter, “a poor priest,” and one man and a married couple who had purchased corrodies in the house, ensuring that they would be cared for in their old age. The six other men listed by name appear to have been vowed staff. There were also six sick persons receiving care, three laywomen who cared for them, and a man to bury the dead. What bound those people together in that place?
The complexity of medieval hospital history has been the subject of frustration and confusion, as well as admiration. The late medieval intensification of debates over hospital administration has been observed by numerous historians, but it has rarely been interpreted as a sign of tension over hospitals’ status in canon law, and the implications of that status. Comparative work on late medieval hospitals can be facilitated by an examination of how hospitals’ religious status was understood and debated.
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- Hospitals in Communities of the Late Medieval Rhineland , pp. 11 - 34Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2023