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Wyświetlanie 1-12 z 12
Tytuł:
Losy wychowanków Szpitala Świętego Ducha w Rzymie w XVIII w.
The Fate of the Pupils of the Holy Ghost Hospital in Rome in the 13th Century
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1860556.pdf
Data publikacji:
1997
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
The fate of the unwanted and abandoned children, similarly as the sick people and the poor, have from time immemorial always been a current, drastic and difficult problem, both moral and ethical. There were many abandoned children in Rome and in its vicinity, a phenomenon that decidedly influenced Innocent III’s decision to found in 1198 a hospital-poor-house in Rome. The hospital was run by the Holy Ghost Fathers. Its principal function, from the time of its foundation onwards, was to take care about the children forsaken by their mothers or families. To abandon a child at the poor-house did not always mean that the child had to stay long there. The hospital personnel made efforts to give as many foundlings as possible to women in Rome or its vicinity to feed and bring them up. After about eleven- (girls) or twelve-year stay (boys) at wet nurses’, the forsaken children would return to the poor-house. Most of them, however, again left the hospital. The girls would get married or were given in service with other people. Generally speaking, they would never return from that service to the hospital. Now the boys, almost all of them, were taken by craftsmen as apprentices. Some foundlings, male and female alike, were given into adoption. It is characteristic that, generally, the hospital foundlings given into adoption, service or apprenticeship, usually came to the same families or persons who had prior taken care of them in the period until they became eleven or twelve years old. The persons who hosted the hospital charges lived, as rule, not farther than 100 km away from Rome. The carers of the foundlings belonged to the lower social classes. The most numerous group consisted of peasants and poor craftsmen.
Źródło:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych; 1997, 25, 2; 141-168
0137-4176
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
„Figli Legitimi” w Rzymie i w państwie kościelnym w XVIII w.
"Figli Legitimi" in Rome and the Church State in the 18th Century
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1861375.pdf
Data publikacji:
1995
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
The fate of unwanted children, the so-called "foundlings", was from the most ancient times an ever current and difficult to solve social problem. The pope Innocent III founded in medieval Rome the Holy Ghost hospital, which was an attempt to solve this problem; the hospital was administered by the order of the Holy Ghost Fathers. In the 17th century, as a rule, over 1000 children were abandoned at the hospital annually, and in the 18th c. from 500 to 900. Rome was the main source of hospital foundlings, and the towns and villages situated within 100 kilometers from the capital of the Church State, especially northward. According to the primary idea of Innocent III the Holy Ghost hospital was for illegitimate children, who came from illegal non-marital relation. Instructions were often issued which recommended admitting to hospital "figli illegitimi" exclusively, and at the same time strictly forbade abandoning "figli legitimi", that is children from legal and full marriages. These guidelines not always brought about the expected effect, since in practice many children from full families were abandoned at the hospital. The decisive majority consisted of children from poor families or they were disabled and ill. A lot of parents abandoned their children at the hospital for some commercial and financial reasons. Then by way of deception they took from the hospital the children they had earlier abandoned. They posed as custodians who would like to bring up hospital foundlings for a permanent payment from the hospital. The hospital staff sought to do away with this practice. They recommended that all foundlings from legal marriages, after proving this fact, should immediately be sent back to their lawful parents. In the period of 1737-1749, during a visitation 21 foundlings were sent back to their parents.
Źródło:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych; 1995, 23, 2; 87-100
0137-4176
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Dzieci porzucone w Rzymie i okolicach w XVIII wieku
Forsaken Children in Rome and its Surroundings in the 18th Century
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1861418.pdf
Data publikacji:
1994
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
The main purpose of the hospital of the Holy Ghost, founded in 1198 and run by Spirituals, was to take care about the forsaken children who were born out of wedlock. Practically they often cared also about children from poor families. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries ca 500-1000 newborns were abandoned at the hospital. The political and social situation in the Church State as well as disasters, which often occurred, had a large bearing on the course and increase of the phenomena of abandoning children. The main source of enlisting foundlings were villages and localities placed within 100 km from Rome, especially north of Rome. As a rule, people abandoned infants at the age of a couple or dozen days or so. The structure and internal layout of the hospital and poor-house were designed in such a way so that it could warrant total discretion for those who abandoned children. People brought foundlings to the poor-house at night or at dark, which provided anonymity for those who left their children. Having being admitted, the babies were then marked with the sign of a double cross, which was the symbol of the Holy Ghost’s hospital. Then they were handed over to the nurses in charge. Abandoning one’s children at the poor-house did not always mean their long-term stay at this institution. The hospital staff sought to give them, as soon as possible, to living in Rome or other places who could feed them and bring them up. Those women who wanted to be nurses in the poor-house, as well as in their own houses, the hospital would put some very rigorous conditions as to both their health, their moral and ethical attitude and their religious life. The children taken from the hospital to be fed and brought up, after a period of stay in the houses of their guardians, had to be unconditionally brought back to the hospital at the age of 11 (girls) or 12.
Źródło:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych; 1994, 22, 2; 84-108
0137-4176
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Źródła normatywne kościelne jako podstawa do badań nad szpitalnictwem w Polsce przedrozbiorowej
Normative Church Sources as a Basis for the Study of Hospital Care in Poland Before the Partitions
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1871004.pdf
Data publikacji:
1990
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
Charity and care of the poor, the sick, the old, vagrants, cripples, the homeless, the handicapped and those struck by other misfortunes were from the earliest times a pressing, difficult and sensitive social problem. From the beginning the Church's charitable activities concentrated around the hospitals which it founded. But synodal statutes, which were the main source of Church legislation in Poland, contain hardly any laws or decrees concerning hospitals until almost as late as the mid-sixteenth century. The pre-Tridentine synods took no direct interest in hospitals, dealing instead with various noninstitutional forms of helping the poor. This lack of interest in hospitals on the part of the pre-Tridentine synods certainly shows relative independence of hospitals from the Church, and the considerable influence municipal authorities had on their management. A breakthrough for the Church's charitable undertakings came at the Council of Trent, which totally subordinated hospitals to the Church, charging the latter with responsibility for founding new hospitals and care of the needy. The Council's constitutions greatly affected the model and the development of hospital care. Postconciliar Church legislation more and more frequently dealt with the problems of Church hospitals. A document of fundamental importance for subsequent legislation regulating the model, functions and internal organization of hospitals in all Polish dioceses was a pastoral letter known as "The Pastoral". It was issued at the synod of the diocese of Cracow in 1601 by Bishop Bernard Maciejowski and then announced at the provincial synod at Piotrków in 1607. Later Church legislation, though frequently dealing with matters of charity and welfare, did not contribute much to the problem of hospitals. The frequent editions of The Pastoral and its reprints in the records of later 17th and 18th century synods show that the questions of welfare and hospital organization it dealt with remained a live issue for about 150 years. This demonstrates the stability of the Polish model of hospital care in the post-Tridentine period.
Źródło:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych; 1990, 18, 2; 57-70
0137-4176
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Kościelna opieka społeczna w wielkopolskiej części diecezji poznańskiej w okresie potrydenckim
The Church Social Care in Wielkopolska Region of the Poznań Diocese During the Post-Tridentine Period
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1871222.pdf
Data publikacji:
1989
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
Prom the very moment of the introduction of Christianity, the Church’s charitable activity was concerned with the running of the hospitals which it had established. In the period of the 16th and 17th centuries, as well as in the Middle Ages, they functioned primarily as almshouses but not infirmaries. In the first thirty years of the 17th century only one parish in five of the Poznan diocese had its own hospital. Ry the end of the I7ht century, though, there were hospitals in about half of the diocesan parishes. The number of hospitals at work in the last quarter of the 17th century did not essentially change throughout the whole 18th century. Over the period of the 17th end 18th centuries the number of the poor increased from 460 to 640 in all hospitals of the Wielkopolska Region of the Poznań diocese. Basically, the percentage of women among inmates ranged from 65 to 30 per cent. In the hospitals, particular care was taken of the religious life of the people staying there. In keeping with the Church’s teaching more attention was paid to the redemption of a patient’s soul than to his or her treatment. The daily routine of the patients consisted of: regular attendance at mass, prayers for the founder and benefactors of the hospital and frequent reception of the Holy Sacraments. Those who did not comply with the above rules were in danger of being discharged from the hospital. Any poor man who disobeyed the rules governing the life at a hospital or behaved disgracefully was also likely to be discharged. The rules defined in detail the districts and principles of alms-collecting by the poor from a hospital. One of the patients’ main occupations, apart from prayer and church services, was begging.
Źródło:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych; 1989, 1; 53-68
0137-4176
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Stosunki wyznaniowe w diecezji krakowskiej w połowie XVIII wieku na podstawie Wizytacji i Tabel biskupa A. S. Załuskiego
Denomination Relations in the Cracow Diocese in the Middle of the 18th Century of the Basis of the Inspections and Records Made by Bishop A. S. Załuski
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1872845.pdf
Data publikacji:
1983
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
The present paper is a contribution to the study of denominational relations in Poland in the middle of the 18th century. It focuses on the territory of Little Poland and precisely on the territory of the diocese of Cracow which, in fact, covers the territory of Little Poland proper. The paper is based on the data recorded in the records and inspection reports made in the years 1747 to 1749. These are the basic but not the only sources used by the author, who, because of some incompleteness of the material, used some other source material like the 1776 census of the population and parishes in the part of the Cracow diocese which was annexed to Austria after the 1st partition of Poland and the census of the population in the part of the diocese which was left in Poland after the 1st partition made by Bishop M. J. Poniatowski in 1787. The „Number of Jewish Heads in the Crown Lands in the Tariff of 1765” was used as an additional material. The data found in the source materials is actually invaluable for the study in denominational relations. Their incompleteness, however, diminishes the value of the demographical data. The aim of this paper, hence, is to fill up the missing information and to calculate the population of particular denominations. The author used the statistic-demographical method. It has been calculated that in the middle of the I8th century there were 90.8 per cent of Roman Catholics, 0.5 % Uniates (Greek Catholics), 5.34 % Jews and only 0.36 % Protestants (Lutherans and Calvinists) in the Cracow diocese. Thus, the Catholics constituted the majority. From among the minorities the belivers of the Judaic faith were a comparatively important group of settlers.
Źródło:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych; 1983, 11, 2; 103-137
0137-4176
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Bractwo św. Anny w Urzędowie (1593-1787)
The Fraternity of St. Ann in Urzędów (1593-1787)
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1857500.pdf
Data publikacji:
2002
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Tematy:
bractwo
św. Anna
skrzynka bracka
ołtarz bracki
uposażenie
seniorzy braccy
promotor (kapłan bracki)
obowiązki braci
Fraternity
St. Ann
Fraternity box
Fraternity altar
endowment
Fraternity seniors
promotor (Fraternity priest)
friars' duties
Opis:
Among the countless number of smaller or bigger social groups existing over the centuries, religious fraternities deserve our particular attention . Their origins go back to the beginning of Christian times. Confraternities were erected by church authorities, functioned in the churches subordinate to bishops or religious orders. They had their own spiritual director and realized their own public, religious, and social aims contained in the statutes. In medieval western Europe, fraternities were a common phenomenon. In Poland they first appeared in the 13th century in Silesia. The post-Tridentine period saw their most dynamic „development” in Poland and in the whole of the Catholic Church. They became important factors of church regeneration and the level of universal influence on the spiritual awareness of society, and played a crucial role in the struggle against Protestantism. The development of fraternities in the end of the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries was closely connected with the development of Marian cult and the cult of the saints. Those fraternities which were well organized, and those bearing the character of religious communities, often had their own altar, chapels, and priests. In the period of the 17th-18th century four religious fraternities were in Urzędów, a town which was the seat of decanate with the same, and which belonged at that time to the Zawichost archdeaconry and the Cracow diocese. Urzędów was a royal town established and located in 1405 by King Vladislav Jagiello. It was a seat of the administrative unit and belonged to the Lublin region. Three of the Urzędów fraternities are the best known confraternities and popular at that time in Poland: Literary Fraternity, Fraternity of St. Ann, and the Rosary Fraternity. Aside to the above, there was for a short period the Fraternity of St. Sebastian which existed nowhere else. The Fraternity of St. Ann in Urzędów was erected in 1593 on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception. It was officially approved by the Lvov archbishop J.D. Solikowski in 1594. The founders and first benefactors of the confraternities were burghers from Urzędów. The fraternity had a side altar devoted to St. Ann. It was spread in Poland first of all by Bernardins and its main task was to discuss with infidels. In practice, however, in the 17th and 18th centuries it had a devotional character. In the initial stage of the confraternity of St. Ann congregations were held four times a years, whereas at the end of the 17th century they were organized annually only twice. Every Tuesday the representatives of the fraternity were obliged to participate in a weekly votive mass to the honour of St. Ann, receive the sacrament of reconciliation and Eucharist, above all to the late fellows friars. During the masses and congregations they collected money on behalf of their association and the church for wax, candles and missal wine. In the Fraternity of St. Ann in Urzędów the administrative functions were held by two trusted members, mostly representatives of the magistrate authorities and, as a rule, rich people, called provisories or seniors. The Fraternity of St. Ann gained their basic funds from voluntary collections raised among fellow friars at masses and congregations, and the money donated and then invested in the burghers' estates, thereby bringing yearly interest. The dusk of the Fraternity of St. Ann occurred in the end of the 1780s when the majority of its legates were provided to build a parish church.
Źródło:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych; 2002, 30, 2; 127-146
0137-4176
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Szkoła dla chłopców przy Szpitalu Świętego Ducha w Rzymie w XVI-XVIII wieku
The School for Boys at the Holy Ghost Hospital in Rome in the 16th-18th Centuries
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1857751.pdf
Data publikacji:
1999
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
The Holy Ghost Hospital was founded in Rome in 1198 by Pope Innocent III, and run by Holy Ghost Fathers. For many centuries it was the largest charitable institution in the whole Christian world. First of all, however, it played an exceptional role as a poor-house for abandoned children, most of them were illegitimate. On average, about 1000 children anjually were left at that institution in the period of the 17th-18th centuries. The abandoned children were left to be fed and brought up by substitute families with which they stayed until they were 11 (girls) or 12, and then returned to the hospital. The girls were then placed in a special ward, called “conservatorio”, and the boys stayed in a separate room: “scuola dei putti” (a school for boys). Contrary to the “conservatorio”, where there were always a few hundred girls, in the school for boys the number of residents was always about ten times lower and oscillated between 30 and 50 people. Having returned to the hospitals, boys stayed relatively shorter periods in the “scuola dei putti”. They were cheap workforce, therefore the could find jobs with artisans, were taken as servants or apprentices. Sometimes, like the girls, they were adopted. The man who took care and supervised the school for abandoned boys was a priest called school master. It was his job to keep order and discipline and to teach his charges to read, write, to teach them grammar, catechism, mercy, Christian piety, good manners and principles of good behaviour. The very name of the institution in which the boys stayed suggests that it had, above all, an educational character. Young residents were to gain some elementary knowledge as regards reading and writing, and to acquire basic religious and moral formation. Apart from religious practices and study, the boys were obliged to carry out some auxiliary jobs on behalf of the hospital. Thus they worked as stable boys, porters, caretakers, and kitchen helpers. Those who were talented in singing and music took part in the church choir, and the most talented were sent to universities or theological seminaries. The abandoned boys stayed for some time in their school, about a few months or years, and then, as it has been mentioned, were sent to artisans, where they continued their education and prepared themselves for adult life in a normal society.
Źródło:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych; 1999, 27, 2; 105-121
0137-4176
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Życie religijne podopiecznych szpitala Świętego Ducha w Rzymie w XVII i XVIII wieku
The Religious Life of the Charges of the Holy Spirit Hospital in Rome in the 17th and 18th Centuries
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1860783.pdf
Data publikacji:
1996
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
The Holy Spirit hospital was founded by Innocent III in Rome in 1198. It was administered and run by the order of Holy Ghost Fathers. For many ages it was the greatest hospital in the Christian world and it specialized mainly in the care about abandoned children. The majority of those children, after an approximately ten year-period stay in the homes of non-hospital wet nurses, were given to service, to learn craft or marry. Some part of them, however, remained in the hospital. The girls were located in the so-called Conservatorio, whereas the boys in the so-called Scuola dei Putti. The charges of the Holy Spirit hospital in Rome, similarly as in other charitable institutions of this type, received religious education and religious practices. The religious life in the hospital under discussion was formed by the religious who permanently stayed there (Holy Ghost Fathers and Mothers). The hospital had direct links with the Vatican, and this obliged it to develop particular religious zeal among its charges. Being a papal hospital („Archiospedale Apostolico”) it constituted a pattern and model for other hospital institutions, also in the sphere of the formation and organization of a religious life. Baptism was deemed a very important fact in the process of the formation of religious attitudes in foundlings. They were baptized immediately after being admitted to the hospital, and then they received the Holy Communion at the age of 12. The children who stayed longer in the poor-house. There they received the sacrament of confirmation. The hospital charges often had to go to confession and receive the holy communion. The record of religious practices developed and binding in the hospital was extremely rich. The type and intensity of religious practices depended on the age of the inmates. Each day began with morning services, prayers and the holy mass. Having fulfilled the spiritual duties, all the inhabitants of „Conservatorio” went to breakfast, and then they started their daily physical works. They also had to listen to and recite the Catholic doctrine and sing spiritual songs. After the morning works there was lunch, during which religious texts were being read, they prayed for the deceased inhabitants and benefactors of the hospital. After lunch all the charges of the poor-house went back to their work. Their day closed with supper and common evening prayers.
Źródło:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych; 1996, 24, 2; 315-333
0137-4176
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Akta wizytacji kanonicznych jako źródło do badań nad szpitalnictwem diecezji poznańskiej w okresie przedrozbiorowym
The Records of Canonical Inspections as a Source for the Investigation into the Hospital Management of the Poznan Diocese in the Pre-partite Period
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1861675.pdf
Data publikacji:
1992
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
The records of Church inspections are a versatile historical source which contains a lot valuable information on various domains. They are also a basic source of the history of hospitals, parochial poor-houses and the so-called hospital provostries which, as a rule, occuredin towns. The records make it possible to assess the exact number of hospitals and the density of their network. Examining the number of hospitals in the Poznan diocese in the 17th and 18th cent. one has to say that the opportunity to get a reliable image of this phenomenon is different for both centuries. The 17th-century inspections do not give much opportunity to render the state of hospitals for the whole diocesis at one time. Quite numerous inspections in that century concern only particular decanates or archdecanates. The 18th-century inspection books give almost complete material for comparison for the whole diocese in the period of: 1724-1728, 1737-1744 and 1777-1787. In view of reliability, the usefulness of the records of inspection for the research on hospitals should also be valued highly, which is particularly true in the case of the18th century.
Źródło:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych; 1992, 2; 5-18
0137-4176
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Szpitale w diecezji poznańskiej w świetle akt wizytacji kościelnych z XVII i XVIII wieku
Hospitals in the Poznan Diocese in the Light of Church Inspection Records in the 17th and 18th Centuries
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1861676.pdf
Data publikacji:
1992
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
The records of canonical inspections are the most important and indispensable source for the research on hospitals. They make it possible to assess not only the exact number of hospitals, but also to get to know the life of their patients, the condition and appearance of hospital buildings as well economical and financial bases of their functioning and their executive board. Briefly speaking, these sources show the actual state of social care at that time as it was perceived and described by the inspectors in the 17th and 18th cent. They permit also to know to what extent the real image of the hospital management corresponded to that propounded by the Church and their internal organization. The general value of these sources is not shaken by the fact that the 17th-century records are incomplete and not so tho rough as those from the 18th cent. From the point of view of their reliability the records should be valued highly as being useful for the research on hospitals, which is particularly true in the case the 18th cent. The numerous and diverse problems connected with the completeness and reliability of information which occur in almost all a inspectors create a need to have a critical and individual view on almost every piece of information within the framework of particular inspections.
Źródło:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych; 1992, 2; 31-46
0137-4176
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Z życia religijnego pensjonariuszy szpitali wielkopolskich w XVII-XVIII wieku
Das religiöse Leben der Pensionäre der Spitäler in Grosspolen im 17. und 18. Jahrhundert
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1871270.pdf
Data publikacji:
1989
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Opis:
Im 17. und 18. Jahrhundert war das Spital als eine in sehr hohem Grade unter kirchlicher Verwaltung stehende Institution ein Ort, wo man sich ganz besonders um das religiöse Leben der zu pflegenden Personen sorgte. Wie J.Lipski in einem Hirtenbrief von 1737 feststellte, wurden die Spitäler nicht nur zur Vermeidung von Bettelei und Landstreichertum gegründet, sondern auch zur Erweckung der Frömmigkeit bei den Armen. Entsprechend der damaligen Lehre der Kirche wurde in den Spitälern mehr Nachdruck auf die Sorge um die Seele des Kranken gelegt als auf seine Gesundheit. Die Spitäler sollten nicht nur Pflege- und gewissem Umfang auch Heilfunktionen erfüllen, sondern auch Bildungs- und Seelsorgefunktionen. Die Kenntnis des Katechismus bildete die einführende und entscheidende Bedingung für die Aufnahme ins Spital und stellte zugleich den ersten Schritt in der Entwicklung des religiösen Lebens der Armen auf dem Gebiet des Spitals dar. Das Leben der Spitalpensionäre sollte intensiv mit Gebeten und religiösen Praktiken angefüllt sein. Zu den hauptsächlichen und typischen religiösen Pflichten der Pensionäre gehörten die systematische Teilnahme an der heiligen Messe, das Rezitieren von Gebeten für die Stifter und Wohltäter sowie die häufige Teilnahme an den heiligen Sakramenten. Eine Nichteinhaltung der religiösen Praktiken und besonders des sakramentalen Lebens wurde mit dem Herauswerfen aus dem Spital bestraft. Die Spitalpensionäre waren auch zu Hilfsdiensten in den Kirchen verpflichtet. Vor allem sollten sie die Fussböden in den Gotteshäusern scheuern und die Kirchen bewachen, bis sie geschlossen wurden. Gleichzeitig wurde unter Androhung strenger Strafen verboten, die Pensionäre zu anderen Arbeiten zu verwenden, es sein denn in Notfällen und für einen würdigen Lohn.
Źródło:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych; 1989, 17, 2; 21-39
0137-4176
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Nauk Społecznych
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-12 z 12

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