From Hospitium to Hortus Medicus: The Roots of Public Healthcare

The public health system is the result of a social and religious development, which has its roots in the first forms of anachoretism of Saint Anthony the Great in the East, and in the monacheism of Saint Benedict and Columbanus in the West. From the first hospitia, which protected pilgrims during th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Paolo Luzzi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2021-09-01
Series:In_Bo
Subjects:
Online Access:https://in-bo.unibo.it/article/view/12457
Description
Summary:The public health system is the result of a social and religious development, which has its roots in the first forms of anachoretism of Saint Anthony the Great in the East, and in the monacheism of Saint Benedict and Columbanus in the West. From the first hospitia, which protected pilgrims during their pilgrimage towards the Holy Land, similar structures developed in connection to the monasteries and the rule of Saint Benedict. Afterwards we encounter more articulated systems which included the so-called giardino dei semplici, provided with out-and-out infirmaries and primitives pharmacies. These structures, initially used only by monks, soon became structures for pilgrims and foreigners, reference points of public healthcare. The secularization of those structures resulted in the creation of the first hospitals combined with the chair of medicine and botanic, and equipped with medical gardens, where medicinal herbs were grown and used for sicks. A modern and functioning example is the Hospital of Santa Maria Nuova in Florence.
ISSN:2036-1602