Hôpital De La Charité
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Hôpital de la Charité (, "Charity Hospital") was a hospital in Paris founded by the Brothers Hospitallers of St. John of God in the 17th century. In 1935, it was closed and demolished to make way for the new faculty of medicine. Located at 45, rue des Saints-Pères, the premises currently house the Saints-Pères university centre, one of the sites of the Paris Cité University.


History

In 1601, Marie de Médicis, second wife of King
Henry IV of France Henry IV (; 13 December 1553 – 14 May 1610), also known by the epithets Good King Henry (''le Bon Roi Henri'') or Henry the Great (''Henri le Grand''), was King of Navarre (as Henry III) from 1572 and King of France from 1589 to 16 ...
, invited the Brothers Hospitallers of St. John of God – commonly called "Brothers of Charity" – to come to France to care for the sick indigents. They were, by their order's rule, doctors and pharmacists who cared for the sick. They first occupied a house located rue de la Petite Seine (current locations of numbers 2-4
rue Bonaparte The Rue Bonaparte () is a street in the 6th arrondissement of Paris. It spans the Quai Voltaire/Quai Malaquais to the Jardin du Luxembourg, crossing the Place Saint-Germain-des-Prés and the Place Saint-Sulpice and has housed many of France's mos ...
and 9 quai Malaquais). A few years later, the Brothers had to move because, Marguerite de Valois, the first wife of Henri IV, had decided in 1607 to establish a convent there (future convent of the Petits-Augustins, established within the perimeter of the current National School of Fine Arts or
Beaux-Arts de Paris The (), formally the (), is a French ''grande école'' whose primary mission is to provide high-level fine arts education and training. The art school, which is part of the Paris Sciences et Lettres University, is located on two sites: Saint-G ...
).Jacques Antoine Dulaure : ''Histoire physique, civile et morale de Paris, depuis les premiers temps historiques'', Guillaume, Paris, 1824, t. 9, In exchange, she offered them the hôtel de Sansac, located near the chapel of Saint-Pierre (or Saints-Pères), which formed the original core of what was to become the hôpital de la Charité. The hospital was re-established there in 1608. It opened under the name of Saint Jean Baptiste de la Charité and was available only to male patients who did not suffer from incurable or venereal diseases. From 1613 onwards, the Brothers engaged in a major construction project, which created several important hospital structures. They received from the abbot of
Saint-Germain-des-Prés Saint-Germain-des-Prés () is one of the four administrative quarters of the 6th arrondissement of Paris, France, located around the church of the former Abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prés. Its official borders are the River Seine on the nor ...
the use of the small Saint-Père chapel. The Brothers repaired the chapel and, ultimately, received it outright as a gift along with the small cemetery that was associated with it. The old chapel was demolished and a new one was consecrated in July 1621 by the Archbishop of Embrun. It was refurbished in the middle of the 17th century and, in 1732, a portal by the architect
Robert de Cotte Robert de Cotte (; 1656 – 15 July 1735) was a French architect-administrator, under whose design control of the royal buildings of France from 1699, the earliest notes presaging the Rococo, Rococo style were introduced. First a pupil of ...
was added. The chapel still stands at the corner of the
boulevard Saint-Germain The Boulevard Saint-Germain () is a major street in Paris on the Rive Gauche of the Seine. It curves in a 3.5-kilometre (2.1 miles) arc from the Pont de Sully in the east (the bridge at the edge of Île Saint-Louis) to the Pont de la Concord ...
and the rue des Saints-Pères. From 1652, the Brothers of Charity also acquired – thanks to an anonymous donation – a house on rue du Bac, which was initially equipped with eight beds for poor convalescents after their discharge from hospital. The establishment, called "Hospital for convalescents of Charité", was located on the south-west corner of
rue du Bac The Rue du Bac () is a street in the 7th arrondissement of Paris. The street, which is 1,150 m long, begins at the junction of the quais Quai Voltaire, Voltaire and Quai Anatole-France, Anatole-France and ends at the Rue de Sèvres. Rue du Bac ...
and rue de Varenne and had extensive gardens. It had its origins in a foundation created in 1628 by Angélique Faure (1593-1664) (widow of the former finance superintendent Claude de Bullion de Bonnelles), though her identity as the donor was not revealed until after her death.Martin-Doisy, J.P. Migne, ''Dictionnaire d'économie charitable'', tome 4, 1864, . The Hospital for convalescents did not admit the sick, only convalescents who did not require medications and who were not infected with contagious diseases. The establishment employed no doctors, surgeons or apothecaries. Two monks and a servant (who were fed and housed according to the terms of a contract established on March 30, 1652) watched over the convalescents during their stay. Limited to fifteen days, this stay was intended to allow them to regain their strength and recover their health. It constituted an early form of follow-up care and rehabilitation. The hospital was rebuilt again in 1778-1781. In 1786 it contained 208 beds in 6 rooms and had the reputation of being the best kept hospital in Paris. The Brothers of Charity also had under their care the Charity of Charenton, a hospital and insane asylum. A detailed plan of the hospital in 1788 is included in Jacques-René Tenon's comprehensive analysis of Parisian hospitals: ''Mémoire sur les hôpitaux de Paris'' (''Memoirs on the Hospitals of Paris.'' In the late 18th-century, the hospital innovated in the delivery of clinical education; Louis Desbois de Rochefort (1750-1786) initiated bedside instruction for medical students that focused on the patients' symptoms and physical signs as diagnostic indicators, marking a major development in the history of medicine in France. Rochefort was succeeded by his assistant Jean-Nicolas Corvisart in 1788, who questioned the traditional
humoral theory Humorism, the humoral theory, or humoralism, was a system of medicine detailing a supposed makeup and workings of the human body, adopted by Ancient Greek and Roman physicians and philosophers. Humorism began to fall out of favor in the 17th ce ...
, and employed more physical methods of diagnosis such as palpitation and percussion. During the French Revolution, La Charité temporarily took the name of ''hospice de l'Unité''. The Brothers of Charity were forced by the Revolutionary government to abandon the hospital in 1791 (though they continued to provide medical services there until their final departure in 1801) due to the confiscation of properties of the Catholic Church. The hospital was converted into a lay establishment governed by a commission of five members. At that time, women became eligible to be treated at the hospital. A section of the hospital's gardens was ceded in the 18th century to the neighboring Society of Foreign Missions. The French National Academy of Medicine had its offices in the hospital from 1850 to 1902.


La Charité in the 20th century

During the 1910 flood of the
Seine The Seine ( , ) is a river in northern France. Its drainage basin is in the Paris Basin (a geological relative lowland) covering most of northern France. It rises at Source-Seine, northwest of Dijon in northeastern France in the Langres plat ...
, the basements of La Charité were flooded. Since the operations of the hospital were compromised, some of the patients were evacuated to other hospitals. The buildings of the Charité hospital were almost totally demolished after 1935 to make way for the new Faculté de médecine de Paris. In 1942, the old hospital chapel was converted into a church and later into the Cathedral of Saint Volodymyr the Great of the Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Saint Wladimir-Le-Grand de Paris.


Practitioners who worked at the hospital

* François Gigot de la Peyronie (1665 – 1774) * Jean-Joseph Sue, dit Sue de la Charité (1710 – 1792) * Louis-Anne La Virotte (1725 – 1759) *
François Chopart François Chopart (20 October 1743 – 9 June 1795) was a French surgeon born in Paris. He was trained in medicine at the Hôtel-Dieu, Pitié and the Bicêtre hospitals. In 1771 he became a professor of practical surgery at the '' École prat ...
(1743 – 1795) * Pierre-Joseph Desault (1738 – 1795) * Jean-Baptiste Dumangin (or Du Mangin) (1744 – 1826) *Louis Desbois de Rochefort (1750 – 1786) * Jean-Nicolas Corvisart (1755 – 1821) * Jean-Joseph Sue or Jean-Joseph Sue (son) (1760 – 1830) * Alexis Boyer (17571833) * Pierre Éloi Fouquier (1776 – 1850) * Philibert Joseph Roux (1780 – 1854) * François Victor Mérat de Vaumartoise (1780 – 1851) *
René Laennec René-Théophile-Hyacinthe Laennec (; 17 February 1781 – 13 August 1826) was a French physician and musician. His skill at carving his own wooden flutes led him to invent the stethoscope in 1816, while working at the Hôpital Necker. ...
(1781 – 1826) * Pierre François Olive Rayer (1793 – 1867) * Pierre Adolphe Piorry (1794 – 1879) * Alfred-Armand-Louis-Marie Velpeau (1795 – 1867) * Gabriel Andral (1797 – 1876) *
Jean-Baptiste Bouillaud Jean-Baptiste Bouillaud (16 September 1796 – 29 October 1881) was a French physician born in Bragette, now part of Garat, Charente. Bouillaud was an early advocate of the localization of cerebral functions (especially of speech). He received ...
(1796 – 1881) * Casimir Davaine (1812 – 1882) * Jules Bernard Luys (1828 – 1897) * Frédéric Labadie-Lagrave (1844 – 1917) * Pierre-Constant Budin (1846 – 1907) * Augusta Déjerine-Klumpke (1859 – 1927) * Léon Charles Albert Calmette (1863 – 1933) *
Georges Guillain Georges Charles Guillain () (3 March 1876 – 29 June 1961) was a French neurologist born in Rouen. He studied medicine in Rouen and Paris, where he learned clinical education at several hospitals. He developed an interest in neurology, and his f ...
(1876 – 1961) * Thérèse Bertrand-Fontaine (1895 – 1987)


See also

*
Dechristianization of France during the French Revolution The aim of several policies conducted by various governments of France during the French Revolution ranged from the appropriation by the government of the great landed estates and the large amounts of money held by the Catholic Church to the te ...
*
Hôtel-Dieu In French-speaking countries, a hôtel-Dieu () was originally a hospital for the poor and needy, run by the Catholic Church. Nowadays these buildings or institutions have either kept their function as a hospital, the one in Paris being the oldest an ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hopital De La Charite Buildings and structures completed in 1621 Charite Former buildings and structures in Paris Defunct hospitals in France Hospitals established in the 17th century 1935 disestablishments in France Demolished buildings and structures in Paris 17th-century establishments in France Hospitals disestablished in 1935 1621 establishments in France Buildings and structures demolished in 1935 Former Catholic hospitals