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San Giovanni Addolorata Hospital

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Azienda Ospedaliera San Giovanni Addolorata
San Giovanni Addolorata, a block of buildings toward Via di Santo Stefano Rotondo.
Map
Geography
LocationRome, Via dell'Amba Aradam 9, Lazio, Italy
Coordinates41°53′08.1″N 12°30′09.0″E / 41.885583°N 12.502500°E / 41.885583; 12.502500
Organisation
PatronSt. John the Baptist
History
Opened1332
Links
Websitehsangiovanni.roma.it/azienda-ospedaliera.aspx

The Azienda Ospedaliera San Giovanni Addolorata in Rome (Italy) is one of the largest hospitals in central Italy; the current administrative designation refers to one of the largest and oldest hospitals in the city, commonly designated as San Giovanni hospital.

History

The Confraternita del SS. Salvatore

The hospital of San Giovanni originates from the "Archconfraternity of the Holy Savior" (Arciconfraternita del Santissimo Salvatore), established to ensure protection and homage to the acheropoieton of the Saviour kept in the Sancta Sanctorum.
Even before the 13th century "twelve optimate and principal gentlemen of Rome, called Ostiarii, Porters or Recommended by the Holy Savior were established to guard it perpetually".[1] The membership in the congregation – which also dealt with the administration of the assets, that were given to charity to fund the charitable works on behalf of the holy image – soon became hereditary among the "optimate and principal gentlemen of Rome" and in 1332 the congregation itself was raised to the status of Confraternity by Pope John XXII.

But times were barbarians[clarification needed], the sanctuary suffered thefts and administrative troubles, the senatorial families were dying out, while the institution had acquired a remarkable economic, no less than religious importance, and therefore had to be brought back under the control of the Bishop of Rome. Once the Popes had returned to Rome from Avignon, first Martin V, then Nicholas V and Sixtus IV and finally Alexander VI put in order the management of the congregation and its assets, entrusting it entirely to the Confraternity, which was intimately linked to the Lateran Chapter and had become meanwhile a powerful economic entity.

The works of charity

The Confraternity – as recalled by Gaetano Moroni – "practiced various works of charity. On the feast of St. John it supplied clothes to twelve poor people and then hosted them for lunch: on Holy Thursday it drew up another table for twelve religious, it gave each of them a pair of shoes, a giulio and a bread; it also provided the dowry to poor maidens; it provided hospitality to poor widows; and finally it took care of the hospital of St. John at Sancta Sanctorum and the colleges Capranica, Nardini, Crivelli and Ghislieri. Such merciful works exhorted the charity of the faithful to nourish them with new subsidies; and in fact, the memory of the generosity of Cardinal Giannantonio Sangiorgi from Piacenza, legate in Rome a latere during the absence of Alexander VI, as well as that of Julius II, who designated the Confraternite as heir of his assets, may be everlasting.".

The building stages

The facade of the hospital by Giacomo Mola overlooking Piazza di San Giovanni in Laterano.

According to tradition, Honorius I in 626 would have transformed his family house into a church dedicated to Saint Andrew, near which, in 1216, Cardinal Giovanni Colonna founded and outfitted a hospice for pilgrims entitled to the same saint.

In 1333 the Confraternity obtained some dilapidated buildings near the church of St. Andrew to found its own hospital; among these, a chapel dedicated to St. Michael the Archangel, that gave the name to the new hospital.
Over time, the hospital was repeatedly expanded thanks to the bequests of benefactors who thus thought of earning the salvation of their souls.[2]

In 1580, Pope Gregory XIII Boncompagni started the construction of the new wing, which still today overlooks the Lateran square towards the west. The long building work of the hospital continued under various popes (Sixtus V, Clement VIII and Urban VIII) until 1639, and were directed by Giacomo Mola from Lugano, who arrived in Rome as the nephew of a bricklayer member of the Confraternite and who in turn joined it in 1606.[3]

At the beginning of the 18th century, the hospital, open to "all patients of any nation, sex, and age",[4] had 120 beds for men ("which are doubled according to the needs and mainly in summer"), while "the women's one, on the other side of the public street, and enlarged by Pope Alexander VII, contains 60 beds.".[5]

At the beginning of the 19th century (the exact period is not clear, perhaps during the French administration), the hospital was completely intended for women and, according to Morichini, could accommodate over 500 women, although normally the patients did not exceed 200. The "Statistics of the Commission for the hospitals in Rome for the year 1863" reports 215 patients at 31 December and 2,563 admitted during the year (446 of them died, the other ones "healed or improved'"). In 1892 the Hospital of San Rocco at the Port of Ripetta, intended for travailing women, was suppressed and all patients were transferred to San Giovanni Hospital.

The land ownership

The coat of arms of Everso II degli Anguillara, a great benefactor of the hospital together with his sons in the 15th century.

The highly detailed Catasto annonario by Nicola Maria Nicolai (1756–1833) gives an overall picture of the agricultural properties belonging to the "Venerable hospital of the Holy Savior "ad Sancta Sanctorum" at the beginning of the 19th century. The following estates are mentioned:

The hospital therefore owned a very large agricultural land patrimony – even considering just what lay within the borders of Rome – extending for almost 2,800 hectares (11 sq mi): it was also increased by numerous estates of various kinds and sizes coming from testamentary bequests, which produced incomes, in addition to those properly intended for hospital services.[13]

After the Italian unification

What remained of the land inheritance of the hospital after the unification of Italy, the alienations and the clearance of the ecclesiastical patrimony was merged in 1896, together with the assets of the other hospitals of Rome, in the institution called Pio Istituto di Santo Spirito e Ospedali Riuniti.[14]

The connection between the hospital and the Holy See continued at least until the full implementation of the Italian National Health Service (the hospitals, which were the heirs of the Catholic charities also from an economic point of view, were dissolved only in 1978 with the Law nr. 833).
After the war it was greatly expanded at public expense, through the construction of new wings inaugurated in September 1958 by the Christian Democrat Mayor of Rome Urbano Cioccetti – one of the main protagonists of the post-war urban planning of the capital – in the presence of the Ministers Fernando Tambroni and Giulio Andreotti.[15]

The present hospital district

San Giovanni Hospital: modern wings.

The hospital currently consists of a huge block of hospital services that extends between Piazza di San Giovanni in Laterano and Via di Santo Stefano Rotondo up to the eponymous basilica on one side, and along Via dell'Amba Aradam up to Via di Villa Fonseca on the other. Coming from the square, the district includes the hospital of San Giovanni, the hospital of the Addolorata (where a new morgue with non-denominational and inter-denominational services was opened in 2009[16]) and the "British hospital". The "Women's Hospital" rises on the other side of Via di san Giovanni in Laterano, overlooking the square.

On the opposite side of Via di Santo Stefano Rotondo there is the Celio military polyclinic, which further expands the sanitary district, although it is not part of the complex of San Giovanni.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Gaetano Moroni, Dizionario di erudizione storico-ecclesiastica, vol. II, Venice 1840, pp. 294 et seq.
  2. ^ Among the donors there was also Vannozza Cattanei, mentioned in a plaque in the main hallway, to whom Nibby modestly refers as the "mother of the Duke of Valentinois" (op. cit.).
  3. ^ About Giacomo Mola see the entry in the Treccani Biographical Dictionary
  4. ^ According to Nibby, some rooms of the former hospital were still visible and used (for example the main hall, converted into a pantry) in 1838.
  5. ^ Francesco Posterla, Roma sacra e moderna, Rome 1707, p. 571 et seq.
  6. ^ See Nicolai, p. 254, nr. 345, 346, 347, 348 e 378.
  7. ^ See Nicolai, pp. 170–173, nr. 204, 205, 214, 287, 288. Many of these estates passed to the Torlonia family just in those years.
  8. ^ See Nicolai, pp. 188–190, nr. 234
  9. ^ See Nicolai, p. 179, nr. 219.
  10. ^ See Nicolai, p. 143, nr. 162.
  11. ^ See Nicolai, pp. 70–71 nr. 86.
  12. ^ See Nicolai, p. 294, nr. 408.
  13. ^ The profitability of such patrimony was nonetheless very low, so much that in 1838 the Papal Treasury had to provide almost half of the 32,000 scudi necessary for the management of the hospital (See Nibby, p. 141). Such low profitability was confirmed almost 50 years later, at the time of the Jacini Inquiry of 1883, when the average economic return of the patrimony – whose extension had in the meantime almost halved down to 1,393 hectares (5.38 sq mi) – was estimated at just 38 lire/ha. (p. 674).
  14. ^ About the transfer of the patrimony of the Pio Istituto to the Lazio Region in 1994 see Corriere della Sera, 23 August 1994, A 1,000 billions "treasure".
    About the use of the agricultural assets acquired by the Municipality of Rome through the Pio Istituto, see the Proceedings of the Cenference The Ager Romanus between protection and development (2011) Archived 16 February 2022 at the Wayback Machine.
  15. ^ For the photos, see here
  16. ^ About the morgue of the Addolorata, see here.

Bibliography

  • "Azienda ospedaliera San Giovanni Addolorata". Archived from the original on 29 July 2015. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  • Cinzia Martini, History and Art of the Hospital District San Giovanni-Addolorata, on the official website