fbpx
Wikipedia

San Giacomo degli Incurabili

The hospital of San Giacomo in Augusta (Saint James in Augusta), also known as San Giacomo degli Incurabili (Saint James of the Incurables) was a historic hospital located in Rome.

Ospedale di San Giacomo degli Incurabili
Southern façade of the Hospital San Giacomo
Geography
LocationLazio, Italy, IT
Organisation
Care systemSistema Sanitario Nazionale
FundingPublic hospital
TypeGeneral
PatronSaint James
Services
Emergency departmentYes
Beds170 (2008)
History
Opened1338
Closed2008

History edit

The Hospital was built for the first time in 1349 by the Colonna family for the will of the cardinal Pietro Colonna in honor of his uncle Giacomo Colonna, as stated in a memorial stone in one of the cortili. Leo X expressed in three apostolic letters between 1515 and 1516[1] his will to rebuild the hospital to help the pilgrims, the poor and especially the "incurables" not accepted from the other hospitals. Leo X mentioned in particular the fight against syphilis as a priority to be set on the hospital's activity.[2] That was a new illness that spread to Europe from the Americas at the end of the 15th century and that was taken to Italy from the troops of the French king Charles VIII of France. In those same years, Girolamo Fracastoro, a pioneer of the modern pathology, proposed a cure for syphilis, the expensive Lignum vitae, that was soon offered to the patients of San Giacomo for free.[3] In fact, the Statuta of San Giacomo was towards receiving patients of all economic conditions of both sexes for free, even for this very expensive cure.[4]

The building activity on the properties of San Giacomo shaped the Tridente. The hospital was rebuilt in the second half of 16th century mainly by the activity of cardinal Antonio Maria Salviati, together with the Church San Giacomo in Augusta, ended in the year 1600. The hospital was starting to be funded by a little percentage from the public fundings, but for the major part from donations by privates: in the 16th century the major donations came from the Pope Paul IV, from cardinal Bartolomé de la Cueva y Toledo with the enormous expense of 80.000 scudi and cardinal Clemente d'Olera with his entire heritage.[5] The donations often consisted in properties, whose incomes were aimed to cover the costs of the hospitality, as done also by Salviati himself with the constitution of a fund bundled to assure incomes to the hospital for the forever future. The condition of the donation of Salviati was confirmed in 1610 by the papal bull in form of motu proprio by the pope Paulus V.[citation needed]

During the 16th century Camillus de Lellis was active in the Hospital. After his conversion to christianity, he reformed the rules of the Hospital itself and established a new religious nursing system, the Order of the Ministers of the Sick also known as "Camillians". After his death, he was declared Saint by the Catholic Church and protector of hospitality.[6] Other notable saints from this century that were also active here were Filippo Neri, Gaetano Thiene and Felice da Cantalice.[citation needed]

During the 17th century was active here also the surgeon Bernardino Genga, tho whom was intitled one Galleria inside the hospital.[7] In 1780 Pius VI built the round-shaped room with Anatomical theatre in the Sala Lancisiana, named after the surgeon Giovanni Maria Lancisi.[citation needed]

In 1815, Pius VII set here the new chair of Surgery of Università La Sapienza. Its first director was the surgeon Giuseppe Sisco. At his death in 1830, Sisco donated his books to the hospital, his surgical instruments and instituted a prize for students.[8] In 1833 Paolo Maria Martinez donated 12 000 scudi to the hospital for sickbeds,[9] as reported on an inscription in the Hospital itself.[10]

In the mid-19th century the Pope Gregory XVI made some major rebuilding work on the hospital structure,[6] with the help of both public and personal economic funding. A number of donors enabled the Hospital to face the strong expenses of public health thanks to the properties they gave it during the centuries. Also in those years, the San Giacomo continued to host patients senza cercarsi l'età, la patria, la condizione, la religione del chiedente (without looking at the age, the country, the status, the religion of the petitioner).[11]

In the years following the Capture of Rome and the union of the City to the Kingdom of Italy in 1870, from 1896, the property of the Hospital was transferred to the Italian state-owned institution Pio Istituto di Santo Spirito e Ospedali Riuniti di Roma, the new owner of all the public Italian hospitals in Rome not owned by the Church.[12]

In the 20th century the hospital was still in full activity. At the end of the century, the building included the biggest Emergency department in the city center of Rome, that server an area of 400.000 residents and people who commute into the city center[13] - but also a large number of tourists out of this number should be taken into account.

On 21 December 1980, the Pope John Paul II visited the hospital.[14]

In October 2008, after 680 years of continuous activity, the hospital was abruptly closed by a regional law issued in August 2008 where the president of the Lazio region Piero Marrazzo was serving as Commissario ad acta. The Lazio region, the new owner of the palace after the city of Rome, is now discussing to open commercial activity in place of public hospitality.[15] Since 2008, the noblewoman Oliva Salviati, descendant of the founder, claims to enforce the testament of his ancestor cardinal Anton Maria Salviati, who donated the building to the city under the strict condition of its use as a hospital: it followed a petition of 60.000 subscribers to keep active the hospital.[16]

Controversies edit

Starting from the 16th century, the hospital was gifted of a solid property fund by the Roman nobility in order to allow the hospital itself to self-finance and to make the cure available also to the poor. This system has been worked well until the end of the 20th century, but in 2008 the Italian business newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore claimed that between 2004 and 2007 a major part of this fund, consisting of 950 buildings, was sold underpriced in non-transparent process resulting in a damage of the civic health system sustainability, despite the obligations under many donations.[17]

The main building of the hospital is still tied to hospital use, thanks to the claims of the Salviati family.

On October 31, 2008, the closing date, the police came into the hospital, causing 4 people injured.[18]

On April 7, 2021 the Consiglio di Stato (Council of State) sentenced that the closing of San Giacomo was "illegitimate" according to the italian law, as a result of the long legal dispute with Oliva Salviati.[19] On the 13 February 2023 the Supreme Court of Cassation definitively confirmed the previous sentence.[20]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Bonella, Fedeli Bernardini, p. 366.
  2. ^ Arrizabalaga, Henderson & French 1997, p. 170.
  3. ^ Henderson, 2006, pp. 98.
  4. ^ Morichini, pp. 95.
  5. ^ Moroni, pp. 271.
  6. ^ a b Morichini, pp. 80.
  7. ^ see: Fedele
  8. ^ Morichini, pp. 82.
  9. ^ Morichini, op. cit, p. 82.
  10. ^ Forcella, Vincenzo (1869). Iscrizioni delle chiese e d'altri edificii di Roma dal secolo XI fino ai giorni nostri (in Italian). Vol. 10. Rome: Tip. delle scienze matematiche e fisiche. p. 144.
  11. ^ Morichini, op. cit, p. 80.
  12. ^ Oliviero Savini Nicci, Le spedalità romane, legislazione, giurisprudenza, pratica. Vol. 1. Società editrice del" Foro Italiano", 1936.
  13. ^ Abitarearoma.it: Sanità, Figliomeni: mozione per chiedere riapertura San Giacomo, 2 July 2015.
  14. ^ "Visit of John Paul II at San Giacomo". vatican.va (in Italian). Retrieved 25 May 2020.
  15. ^ Romatoday: Ospedale San Giacomo, battaglia per la riapertura, 17 September 2018.
  16. ^ San Giacomo: il progetto dei residenti, Repubblica, 15 February 2013
  17. ^ Fabio Pavesi (28 December 2008). "La maxi-svendita capitolina". Gruppo 24 Ore. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  18. ^ "S.Giacomo occupato, poi lo sgombero - Paura e feriti alla vigilia della chiusura". La Repubblica. 31 October 2008. Retrieved 3 May 2021.
  19. ^ "Consiglio di Stato: annullata la chiusura dell'Ospedale San Giacomo di Roma". La Stampa. 7 April 2021. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  20. ^ "Ospedale San Giacomo, sì alla riapertura: Oliva Salviati ha vinto il ricorso in Cassazione contro la Regione Lazio". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). 23 February 2023.

Bibliography edit

  • Arrizabalaga, Jon; Henderson, John; French, Roger Kenneth (1997). The Great Pox: The French Disease in Renaissance Europe. Yale University Press.
  • Statuti del venerabile archiospidale di San Giacomo in Augusta nominato dell’Incurabili di Roma, Roma, 1659.
  • Stefano Ciccolini, Le nuove opere dell'archiospedale di S. Giacomo in Augusta: descritte, Tipografia dell Rev. Cam. Apostolica, 1864.
  • Carlo Luigi Morichini, Degl'istituti di pubblica carità ed istruzione primaria e delle prigioni in Roma, Volume 1, Marini, 1842 .
  • Lia Bonella, Franca Fedeli Bernardini, L'ospedale dei pazzi di Roma dai papi al '900. Volume II, Bari, Edizioni Dedalo, 1994.
  • Padre Sanzio Cicatelli, Vita del P. Camillo de Lellis, a cura di P. Piero Sannazzaro, Roma, Curia Generalizia Camilliani, 1980.
  • Enrico Fedele, L'Ospedale San Giacomo in Augusta tra storia, assistenza e cultura, in «Bollettino della scuola medica ospedaliera di Roma e della Regione Lazio», anno IV, numero 9, luglio/settembre 1998.
  • Fabio Robotti, Le medaglie pontificie dedicate agli ospedali nella Roma del Papa Re. L'Arciospedale di San Giacomo in Augusta detto anche degli Incurabili, in «Panorama numismatico» n. 260, aprile 2011.
  • Mario Massani, L'arcispedale di San Giacomo in Augusta dalle origini ai nostri giorni, Roma, Ed. Tipografia Poliglotta Vaticana, 1983.
  • Anna Lio, La chiesa di Santa Maria in Porta Paradisi ed il complesso Ospedaliero del San Giacomo, Roma, Ed. Palombi, 2000.
  • Padre Mario Vanti, San Giacomo degl'Incurabili di Roma nel Cinquecento - dalle Compagnie del Divin Amore a S. Camillo de Lellis, Roma, Tip. Rotatori, 1991.
  • Pietro De Angelis, L' arcispedale di San Giacomo in Augusta, Tipogr. Ed. Italia, 1955
  • Alessandra Cavaterra, L’ospedalità a Roma nell’età moderna: il caso del San Giacomo (1585-1605), Sanità, scienza e storia 2 (1986): 87-123.
  • M. Valli, San Giacomo degli incurabili di Roma nel '500, Roma, 1938.
  • John Henderson, The mal francese in sixteenth-century Rome: the ospedale di San Giacomo in Augusta and the "incurabili", (1998): 483-523., In: Sonnino, E. (ed.) Popolazione e società a Roma dal medioevo all'età contemporanea. Rome, Italy: Il Calamo, pp. 483–523. ISBN 9788886148498.
  • M. Heinz, Das Hospital S. Giacomo in Augusta in Rom: Peruzzi und Antonio da Sangallo i. G. Zum Hospitalbau der Hochrenaissance, in: Storia dell'arte, 1981, n. 41, p. 31-48
  • Angela Groppi, I conservatori della virtù: donne recluse nella Roma dei papi, Vol. 2. Laterza, 1994.
  • Gaetano Moroni, Ospedali di Roma in Dizionario di erudizione storico-ecclesiastica da S. Pietro sino ai nostri giorni, Vol. 49. Tipografia Emiliana, Venezia, 1848.
  • John Henderson, The mal francese in sixteenth-century Rome: the ospedale di San Giacomo in Augusta and the'incurabili, (1998): 483-523.
  • John Henderson, The Renaissance hospital: healing the body and healing the soul, Yale University Press, 2006.
  • Francesca Romana Stabile, L'ospedale di S. Giacomo in Augusta, dall'assistenza alla cura, in "Ricerche di storia dell'arte" 3/2018, pp. 5–17, doi: 10.7374/92086

Other projects edit

giacomo, degli, incurabili, this, article, about, hospital, attached, church, giacomo, augusta, hospital, giacomo, augusta, saint, james, augusta, also, known, saint, james, incurables, historic, hospital, located, rome, ospedale, southern, façade, hospital, g. This article is about the hospital For the attached church see San Giacomo in Augusta The hospital of San Giacomo in Augusta Saint James in Augusta also known as San Giacomo degli Incurabili Saint James of the Incurables was a historic hospital located in Rome Ospedale di San Giacomo degli IncurabiliSouthern facade of the Hospital San GiacomoGeographyLocationLazio Italy ITOrganisationCare systemSistema Sanitario NazionaleFundingPublic hospitalTypeGeneralPatronSaint JamesServicesEmergency departmentYesBeds170 2008 HistoryOpened1338Closed2008 Contents 1 History 2 Controversies 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 Other projectsHistory editThe Hospital was built for the first time in 1349 by the Colonna family for the will of the cardinal Pietro Colonna in honor of his uncle Giacomo Colonna as stated in a memorial stone in one of the cortili Leo X expressed in three apostolic letters between 1515 and 1516 1 his will to rebuild the hospital to help the pilgrims the poor and especially the incurables not accepted from the other hospitals Leo X mentioned in particular the fight against syphilis as a priority to be set on the hospital s activity 2 That was a new illness that spread to Europe from the Americas at the end of the 15th century and that was taken to Italy from the troops of the French king Charles VIII of France In those same years Girolamo Fracastoro a pioneer of the modern pathology proposed a cure for syphilis the expensive Lignum vitae that was soon offered to the patients of San Giacomo for free 3 In fact the Statuta of San Giacomo was towards receiving patients of all economic conditions of both sexes for free even for this very expensive cure 4 The building activity on the properties of San Giacomo shaped the Tridente The hospital was rebuilt in the second half of 16th century mainly by the activity of cardinal Antonio Maria Salviati together with the Church San Giacomo in Augusta ended in the year 1600 The hospital was starting to be funded by a little percentage from the public fundings but for the major part from donations by privates in the 16th century the major donations came from the Pope Paul IV from cardinal Bartolome de la Cueva y Toledo with the enormous expense of 80 000 scudi and cardinal Clemente d Olera with his entire heritage 5 The donations often consisted in properties whose incomes were aimed to cover the costs of the hospitality as done also by Salviati himself with the constitution of a fund bundled to assure incomes to the hospital for the forever future The condition of the donation of Salviati was confirmed in 1610 by the papal bull in form of motu proprio by the pope Paulus V citation needed During the 16th century Camillus de Lellis was active in the Hospital After his conversion to christianity he reformed the rules of the Hospital itself and established a new religious nursing system the Order of the Ministers of the Sick also known as Camillians After his death he was declared Saint by the Catholic Church and protector of hospitality 6 Other notable saints from this century that were also active here were Filippo Neri Gaetano Thiene and Felice da Cantalice citation needed During the 17th century was active here also the surgeon Bernardino Genga tho whom was intitled one Galleria inside the hospital 7 In 1780 Pius VI built the round shaped room with Anatomical theatre in the Sala Lancisiana named after the surgeon Giovanni Maria Lancisi citation needed In 1815 Pius VII set here the new chair of Surgery of Universita La Sapienza Its first director was the surgeon Giuseppe Sisco At his death in 1830 Sisco donated his books to the hospital his surgical instruments and instituted a prize for students 8 In 1833 Paolo Maria Martinez donated 12 000 scudi to the hospital for sickbeds 9 as reported on an inscription in the Hospital itself 10 In the mid 19th century the Pope Gregory XVI made some major rebuilding work on the hospital structure 6 with the help of both public and personal economic funding A number of donors enabled the Hospital to face the strong expenses of public health thanks to the properties they gave it during the centuries Also in those years the San Giacomo continued to host patients senza cercarsi l eta la patria la condizione la religione del chiedente without looking at the age the country the status the religion of the petitioner 11 In the years following the Capture of Rome and the union of the City to the Kingdom of Italy in 1870 from 1896 the property of the Hospital was transferred to the Italian state owned institution Pio Istituto di Santo Spirito e Ospedali Riuniti di Roma the new owner of all the public Italian hospitals in Rome not owned by the Church 12 In the 20th century the hospital was still in full activity At the end of the century the building included the biggest Emergency department in the city center of Rome that server an area of 400 000 residents and people who commute into the city center 13 but also a large number of tourists out of this number should be taken into account On 21 December 1980 the Pope John Paul II visited the hospital 14 In October 2008 after 680 years of continuous activity the hospital was abruptly closed by a regional law issued in August 2008 where the president of the Lazio region Piero Marrazzo was serving as Commissario ad acta The Lazio region the new owner of the palace after the city of Rome is now discussing to open commercial activity in place of public hospitality 15 Since 2008 the noblewoman Oliva Salviati descendant of the founder claims to enforce the testament of his ancestor cardinal Anton Maria Salviati who donated the building to the city under the strict condition of its use as a hospital it followed a petition of 60 000 subscribers to keep active the hospital 16 Controversies editStarting from the 16th century the hospital was gifted of a solid property fund by the Roman nobility in order to allow the hospital itself to self finance and to make the cure available also to the poor This system has been worked well until the end of the 20th century but in 2008 the Italian business newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore claimed that between 2004 and 2007 a major part of this fund consisting of 950 buildings was sold underpriced in non transparent process resulting in a damage of the civic health system sustainability despite the obligations under many donations 17 The main building of the hospital is still tied to hospital use thanks to the claims of the Salviati family On October 31 2008 the closing date the police came into the hospital causing 4 people injured 18 On April 7 2021 the Consiglio di Stato Council of State sentenced that the closing of San Giacomo was illegitimate according to the italian law as a result of the long legal dispute with Oliva Salviati 19 On the 13 February 2023 the Supreme Court of Cassation definitively confirmed the previous sentence 20 Hospital of St James of the Incurables San Giacomo degli Incurabili nbsp Church and Hospital of San Giacomo on the Corso in the 18th century nbsp Elemosiniera for public charity nbsp Plaque in honour of the eldest uninterrupted idric service in Rome 1572 1981 nbsp Galleria Genga nbsp Sala Lancisiana nbsp Anatomical theatre nbsp Anatomical theatre frescos nbsp Plaque of Camillo de Lellis inside the hospital Patrons nbsp Anton Maria Salviati nbsp Pope Leo X nbsp Clemente d Olera nbsp Paolo Maria MartinezSee also editSala Lancisiana of Saint James in Augusta History of syphilis History of hospitalsReferences edit Bonella Fedeli Bernardini p 366 Arrizabalaga Henderson amp French 1997 p 170 Henderson 2006 pp 98 Morichini pp 95 Moroni pp 271 a b Morichini pp 80 see Fedele Morichini pp 82 Morichini op cit p 82 Forcella Vincenzo 1869 Iscrizioni delle chiese e d altri edificii di Roma dal secolo XI fino ai giorni nostri in Italian Vol 10 Rome Tip delle scienze matematiche e fisiche p 144 Morichini op cit p 80 Oliviero Savini Nicci Le spedalita romane legislazione giurisprudenza pratica Vol 1 Societa editrice del Foro Italiano 1936 Abitarearoma it Sanita Figliomeni mozione per chiedere riapertura San Giacomo 2 July 2015 Visit of John Paul II at San Giacomo vatican va in Italian Retrieved 25 May 2020 Romatoday Ospedale San Giacomo battaglia per la riapertura 17 September 2018 San Giacomo il progetto dei residenti Repubblica 15 February 2013 Fabio Pavesi 28 December 2008 La maxi svendita capitolina Gruppo 24 Ore Retrieved 18 July 2020 S Giacomo occupato poi lo sgombero Paura e feriti alla vigilia della chiusura La Repubblica 31 October 2008 Retrieved 3 May 2021 Consiglio di Stato annullata la chiusura dell Ospedale San Giacomo di Roma La Stampa 7 April 2021 Retrieved 8 April 2021 Ospedale San Giacomo si alla riapertura Oliva Salviati ha vinto il ricorso in Cassazione contro la Regione Lazio Corriere della Sera in Italian 23 February 2023 Bibliography editArrizabalaga Jon Henderson John French Roger Kenneth 1997 The Great Pox The French Disease in Renaissance Europe Yale University Press Statuti del venerabile archiospidale di San Giacomo in Augusta nominato dell Incurabili di Roma Roma 1659 Stefano Ciccolini Le nuove opere dell archiospedale di S Giacomo in Augusta descritte Tipografia dell Rev Cam Apostolica 1864 Carlo Luigi Morichini Degl istituti di pubblica carita ed istruzione primaria e delle prigioni in Roma Volume 1 Marini 1842 Lia Bonella Franca Fedeli Bernardini L ospedale dei pazzi di Roma dai papi al 900 Volume II Bari Edizioni Dedalo 1994 Padre Sanzio Cicatelli Vita del P Camillo de Lellis a cura di P Piero Sannazzaro Roma Curia Generalizia Camilliani 1980 Enrico Fedele L Ospedale San Giacomo in Augusta tra storia assistenza e cultura in Bollettino della scuola medica ospedaliera di Roma e della Regione Lazio anno IV numero 9 luglio settembre 1998 Fabio Robotti Le medaglie pontificie dedicate agli ospedali nella Roma del Papa Re L Arciospedale di San Giacomo in Augusta detto anche degli Incurabili in Panorama numismatico n 260 aprile 2011 Mario Massani L arcispedale di San Giacomo in Augusta dalle origini ai nostri giorni Roma Ed Tipografia Poliglotta Vaticana 1983 Anna Lio La chiesa di Santa Maria in Porta Paradisi ed il complesso Ospedaliero del San Giacomo Roma Ed Palombi 2000 Padre Mario Vanti San Giacomo degl Incurabili di Roma nel Cinquecento dalle Compagnie del Divin Amore a S Camillo de Lellis Roma Tip Rotatori 1991 Pietro De Angelis L arcispedale di San Giacomo in Augusta Tipogr Ed Italia 1955 Alessandra Cavaterra L ospedalita a Roma nell eta moderna il caso del San Giacomo 1585 1605 Sanita scienza e storia 2 1986 87 123 M Valli San Giacomo degli incurabili di Roma nel 500 Roma 1938 John Henderson The mal francese in sixteenth century Rome the ospedale di San Giacomo in Augusta and the incurabili 1998 483 523 In Sonnino E ed Popolazione e societa a Roma dal medioevo all eta contemporanea Rome Italy Il Calamo pp 483 523 ISBN 9788886148498 M Heinz Das Hospital S Giacomo in Augusta in Rom Peruzzi und Antonio da Sangallo i G Zum Hospitalbau der Hochrenaissance in Storia dell arte 1981 n 41 p 31 48 Angela Groppi I conservatori della virtu donne recluse nella Roma dei papi Vol 2 Laterza 1994 Gaetano Moroni Ospedali di Roma in Dizionario di erudizione storico ecclesiastica da S Pietro sino ai nostri giorni Vol 49 Tipografia Emiliana Venezia 1848 John Henderson The mal francese in sixteenth century Rome the ospedale di San Giacomo in Augusta and the incurabili 1998 483 523 John Henderson The Renaissance hospital healing the body and healing the soul Yale University Press 2006 Francesca Romana Stabile L ospedale di S Giacomo in Augusta dall assistenza alla cura in Ricerche di storia dell arte 3 2018 pp 5 17 doi 10 7374 92086Other projects editCategory Arcispedale di San Giacomo degli Incurabili Rome at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title San Giacomo degli Incurabili amp oldid 1183537523, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.