
Hospitals were broadly conceived in the Middle Ages as establishments that received pilgrims and travelers, tended to the poor, and, with the professionalization of medicine, increasingly came to provide care to the sick and dying. In Charity and Welfare, James Brodman surveys the networks of hospitals and charitable institutions in medieval Catalonia that gave food to the hungry, dowries to indigent women, shelter to the homeless, and palliative care to the ill.
The book places Catalan institutions in the broader European context and gracefully synthesizes a huge amount of scholarship, widely scattered in local and specialist sources. It shows how, just as contemporary society struggles with the issues of welfare reform, managed health care and assistance to the elderly, so did the people of the Middle Ages deal with questions of who to help and what criteria to use to make those decisions. In their assessments, they made a clear distinction between charity, aid given gratuitously and indiscriminately to others, and welfare, assistance targeted toward certain groups for particular, desired ends.
In framing the medieval mentality concerning the poor, Charity
and Welfare emphasizes the difference between secular and lay action,
the crystallization of categories for the poor, and the emergence of charity
and welfare as motivations for public assistance. The author concludes
that Catalan hospitals depended upon the close collaboration of church
and state, a mixture of voluntary and public funding, and a combination
of religious and secular values.
This
is one of the wards of the medieval Hospital of Santa Creu in Barcelona,
which is now utilized as part of the modern Biblioteca de Catalunya.