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Wyświetlanie 1-3 z 3
Tytuł:
Szpitalnictwo zakonne w średniowiecznej Polsce
Hospital service offered by religious orders in the mediaeval Poland
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1886431.pdf
Data publikacji:
2015
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II. Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL
Tematy:
zakony męskie
szpitale
przytułki
zakony mnisze
kanonickie zakony szpitalne
zakony rycersko-szpitalne
praca charytatywna
dobroczynność
zakony żeńskie
men’s religious orders
hospitals
poorhouses
monastic orders
canon hospitaller orders
military-hospitaller orders
charity work
charity
women’s religious orders
Opis:
Rozwój szpitalnictwa w państwie polskim związany był z przyjęciem chrztu, rozwojem chrześcijaństwa i organizacji kościelnej, przede wszystkim zaś z przybyciem zakonów eremicko-mniszych: benedyktynów i cystersów. Wprawdzie ich zasadniczą misją nie była praca charytatywna, jednak zgodnie z regułą prowadzili oni w swoich opactwach hospicja i szpitale wewnątrzklasztorne oraz zajmowali się pomocą dla potrzebujących i leczeniem chorych. W sumie zakony te prowadziły w średniowieczu 28 szpitali (11 benedyktyńskie i 17 cysterskie). Jednak to nie zakony eremickie były prekursorami szpitalnictwa i opieki społecznej na ziemiach państwa polskiego w pierwszych wiekach jego istnienia, lecz rozwijające się od drugiej połowy XII wieku zakony kanonikatu regularnego, których działalność charytatywna, zwłaszcza szpitalna, stała się ich główną misją, zapisaną w regułach zakonnych. Byli to kanonicy regularni św. Augustyna, bożogrobcy (miechowici), duchacy (kanonicy regularni Świętego Ducha), Krzyżacy z czerwoną gwiazdą, antonianie. Z omówioną wyżej grupą zakonów kanonikatu regularnego łączyły się ściśle zakony rycerskie, które powstały na kanwie ruchu krucjatowego i zbrojnych wypraw krzyżowych do Jerozolimy i towarzyszącego im ruchu pielgrzymkowego. Ich celem było prowadzenie hospicjów i szpitali dla pielgrzymów i innych potrzebujących. Zakony rycerskie, podobnie jak i wcześniej wymienione zakony duchaków, bożogrobców czy Krzyżaków z czerwoną gwiazdą, nazywano zakonami krzyżowymi, ponieważ za swój wyróżnik przyjęły insygnium krzyża. W sumie na ziemiach, zmieniającego się ciągle pod względem terytorialnym, państwa polskiego, uwzględniając Śląsk i tereny zagarnięte przez Krzyżaków, można się doliczyć w okresie całego średniowiecza około 45 szpitali prowadzonych przez charytatywne zakony kanoników regularnych i związane z nimi zakony rycersko-szpitalne. Zdecydowana większość szpitali zakonów kanonickich i rycerskich skoncentrowana była na południowo-zachodnich i północno-zachodnich terenach, szczególnie na Śląsku i na Pomorzu. W największym stopniu pracy charytatywnej poświęcali się duchacy, Krzyżacy z czerwoną gwiazdą oraz antonianie, natomiast bożogrobcy, templariusze, joannici i niemieccy Krzyżacy, jako zakony rycerskie realizowały podwójną misję szpitalno-militarną. Działalnością charytatywną i prowadzeniem szpitali zajmowały się też, choć w mniejszym stopniu, zakony żeńskie. Najważniejszą rolę w tej dziedzinie odegrały duchaczki. Dziełami miłosierdzia zajmowały się też mniszki benedyktyńskie i cysterskie. Czyniły to jednak, jak ich męskie odpowiedniki, na marginesie swej zasadniczej działalności. W nieco większym stopniu w prowadzenie szpitali angażowały się tzw. beginki – luźne grupy kobiet trzymające się najczęściej kościołów dominikańskich czy franciszkańskich oraz reguł życia wspólnotowego przyjętych dla ludzi świeckich związanych z tymi zakonami, czyli tzw. trzeciego zakonu. Natomiast sporadycznie pracą szpitalniczą zajmowały się klaryski, magdalenki, brygidki, norbertanki czy franciszkanki.
The development of hospital service in Poland was connected with the acceptance of baptism, with the development of the Church organization, and first of all with the coming of eremite-monastic orders: Benedictines and Cistercians to Poland. Admittedly their main mission was not charity work, but according to their rules they ran hospices and hospitals that were located inside their monasteries, and they helped those in need and treated the ill. Altogether the orders ran 28 hospitals (the Benedictines ran 11, and the Cistercians – 17). However, it is not eremite orders that were the forerunners of hospital service and charity institutions in the area of Poland in its first centuries, but the orders of regular canonry that were developed since the second half of the 12th century, whose charity work, and especially running hospitals, became their main mission recorded in their rules. They were Canons Regular living under the rule of St Augustine, the Order of the Holy Sepulcher (the Order of Miechów), Canons Regular of the Holy Spirit, the Knights of the Cross with the Red Star, the Hospital Brothers of St Anthony. The above discussed group of orders of regular canonry was closely connected with military orders that were established on the basis of the crusade movement and armed crusades to Jerusalem as well as the pilgrimage movement that accompanied them. Their aim was to run hospices and hospitals for pilgrims and other people who were in need. Military orders, like the earlier mentioned orders of the Holy Spirit, the Holy Sepulcher or the Knights of the Cross with the Red Star, were called orders of the cross, since they accepted the sign of the cross as their symbol. In total, in the area of the territorially changing Poland, including Silesia and the areas conquered by the Teutonic Order, about 45 hospitals may be counted up that were run by Canons Regular and military-hospitallers. A decided majority of hospitals run by Canons Regular and military orders were concentrated in the south-west and north-west parts of Poland, especially in Silesia and Pomerania. The orders of Holy Spirit, of St Anthony and the Knights of the Cross with the Red Star were devoted to charity work in the greatest degree, whereas the order of the Holy Sepulcher, the Knights Templar, the Knights of Malta and the German Teutonic Order carried out the double, hospitaller-military mission. Women’s orders also did charity work and ran hospitals, albeit to a lesser degree. The Sisters of the Holy Spirit played the most important role in this field. Also the Benedictine and Cistercian nuns dealt with charity. However, they did so on the margin of their basic activities. The so-called beguines – groups of women most often keeping close to Dominican or Franciscan churches and keeping to the rules of community life accepted for lay people connected with these orders, that is for the so-called Third Order – were to a little greater degree involved in running hospitals. On the other hand, the Capuchin Poor Clares, the Magdalene Sisters, the Bridgettines, the Norbertines or the Franciscan nuns were occupied with hospitals only sporadically.
Źródło:
Roczniki Humanistyczne; 2015, 63, 2; 49-98
0035-7707
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Humanistyczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Bractwa charytatywne w Polsce od średniowiecza do końca XVIII wieku
Brotherhoods of charity in Poland from the Middle Ages to the late eighteenth century
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1023522.pdf
Data publikacji:
2014-06-27
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II
Tematy:
bractwa religijne
bractwa charytatywne
bractwa szpitalne
bractwa miłosierdzia
Piotr Skarga
Michał Jerzy Poniatowski
religious brotherhoods
brotherhood of charity
hospital fraternities
brotherhood of mercy
Opis:
Religious brotherhoods were one of the institutions, apart from schools and hospitals, which in past centuries played an important role in the lives of individual parishes, towns and villages. They were associations – church communities, with legal personality, bringing together people for religious purposes, regardless of gender and social origin. Different kinds of brotherhoods, including the ones of charitable and protective nature became a common phenomenon between the 11th and the 15th centuries in the West. In the thirteenth century, they also began to take hold on Polish soil, referring to Western patterns. Hospital fraternities (fraternitas hospitales) have the oldest tradition of secular charities in the Polish land. Their aim was to provide people, who often did the activities connected with the medieval hospital. Some of them even founded and ran hospitals. Just like all other religious brotherhoods, at the earliest, in the thirteenth century, they appeared in Silesia. In the group of hospital fraternities the brotherhood of the Holy Spirit played a special role. That brotherhood was associated only with hospitals run by the Order of the same name, so-called ‘duchaki’. Brotherhoods of the poor were far more common in the Polish land. Their main aim was to focus on charitable activities and they encompassed almost all the lands of the Polish Republic. Their heyday was primarily in the fifteenth and the early sixteenth century. Brotherhoods of the poor developed evenly in terms of chronology in the whole land of the Polish state. Those fraternities exercised complete control over the lives of every beggar who was in the town; they regulated districts, begging procedures and oversaw the behaviour of the poor. The chief duty of brotherhoods of the poor was to take care of the sick in hospitals and their homes. The duty of brothers was also a concern for the dead, especially the poor and homeless, Christian burial and funeral as well as the prayers for those whom they took care of. In the atmosphere of the reforms of the Council of Trent (1545-1563), religious brotherhoods began again spontaneously developing in Poland. The most important of the new brotherhoods of charity was a brotherhood of mercy, established at the end of the sixteenth century by the preacher Jesuit Piotr Skarga. The first model brotherhood of mercy was organized by Skarga in 1584, and it was attached to the Jesuit Church of St. Barbara in Krakow. Other brotherhoods, based on Skarga’s pattern, were formed in major cities of the Polish Republic, including Vilnius, Warsaw, Poznań, Pułtusk, Łowicz, Lviv, Zamość, Rzeszów, Lublin, Przemyśl. The period of the development of brotherhoods of mercy occurred in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century. Then those organizations gradually disappeared and were forgotten. The idea of Piotr Skarga’s brotherhoods of mercy was renewed in the new spirit of the Enlightenment in the 1770s by Bishop, later Primate Michał Jerzy Poniatowki. They were not to be one of many brotherhoods, but the ones to which the others were to be “subordinate”. Poniatowski incorporated all the previous devotional confraternities into them, along with their funds, used henceforth for the purpose not so much pious as socially useful. Reborn in the era of the first partition, brotherhoods of mercy, compared to their earlier prototype, due to the obligation of establishing them at every parish, had a more common and universal character, and were involved in more diverse charitable, social and educational activities. Apart from the above mentioned brotherhoods of charity, which were the most famous and widespread in the Polish land in the Middle Ages and modern times, there were a number of other charitable associations. Those were: brotherhoods of priests, brotherhoods of good death, funeral brotherhoods, brotherhoods of St. Barbara, brotherhoods of St. Lazarus, brotherhoods of St. Roch, brotherhoods of St. Sebastian, brotherhoods of St. Benon, brotherhoods of St. Nicholas and St. Jacob. Some devotional brotherhoods also dealt with charity. Although they mainly focused on the celebration of different forms of worship, the statutes of many explicitly advocated doing the acts of mercy toward other people. A brotherhood which stood out in this field was the literary one.
Źródło:
Archiwa, Biblioteki i Muzea Kościelne; 2014, 101; 233-296
0518-3766
2545-3491
Pojawia się w:
Archiwa, Biblioteki i Muzea Kościelne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Działalność charytatywna zakonów żeńskich w Polsce nowożytnej
Charitable activity of female religious orders in Poland in the early modern period
Autorzy:
Surdacki, Marian
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1023035.pdf
Data publikacji:
2015-06-26
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II
Tematy:
miłosierdzie
działalność charytatywna
dobroczynność
szpitale
zakony
zgromadzenia żeńskie zakonne
szarytki
duchaczki
sierocińce
chorzy
mercy
charitable activity
hospitals
religious orders
female congregations
the Sisters of Charity
the Sisters Canonesses of the Holy Spirit
orphanages
the sick
Opis:
The development of hospital services in the Polish State was associated with baptism, the development of Christianity and church organization, and above all, the arrival of religious orders. In the Middle Ages, male religious orders played a huge role in charitable activities, while in modern times female congregations dealing with charity and hospital services were of great importance in that regard. As for female religious orders in the Middle Ages, the Benedictine and Cistercian nuns were the first ones who were engaged in running hospitals and charity work, although it was not their primary mission and charisma. Sometimes hospitals were also run by the Poor Clare Sisters of the Second Franciscan Order, the Magdalene Sisters, the Bridgettine Sisters, and primarily by the Beguines, loose groups of women who were close mostly to Dominican and Franciscan churches and the rules of community life, that is the Third Order. The most important congregation, however, turned out to be the Sisters Canonesses of the Holy Spirit (duchaczki in Polish), who from the beginning of the thirteenth century run, along  with the male branch of the Order, Holy Spirit hospital in Cracow, which specialized in the care of abandoned children and was the largest and the most important one in Poland until the Enlightenment. The great development of charitable female religious congregations occurred after the Council of Trent (1545-1563). Undoubtedly, the most significant of which were the Sisters of Charity (so-called szarytki in Polish) founded by St. Vincent de Paul in Paris in 1633. In Poland, they had 29 houses, where they ran hospitals, orphanages and schools for girls, including the poor. Similar activities, although at a smaller scale, were done by the Sisters of St. Catherine from Braniewo, founded in 1571 by Regina Protman. In addition, charitable activities were undertaken by the Congregation of the Virgins of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary (founded in Cracow in the 1620s by Zofia Czeska), the Visitation Sisters (founded by St. Francis de Sales -1601, Geneva,) and the Mariavites founded in 1737 by Stefan Turczynowicz in Vilnius. Apart from the above mentioned orders, the work of mercy was developed, on the margins of its core mission, by most non-charitable female religious congregations existing in Poland in the period before the partitions.
Źródło:
Archiwa, Biblioteki i Muzea Kościelne; 2015, 103; 237-271
0518-3766
2545-3491
Pojawia się w:
Archiwa, Biblioteki i Muzea Kościelne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
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