Michael Stolberg
EuropeÕs Oldest Hospice? The Nuremberg Hospital ÔHundertsuppeÕ,
1770-1813
Hospices for terminally ill
and dying patients have so far been considered an ÔinventionÕ
of the late 19th century. Based on the analysis of admission
journals and other archival sources, this paper presents the hospital ÒHundertsuppeÓ
in Nuremberg as an institution which already exhibited most characteristics of
a modern hospice 100 years before that. Established, in 1770, as a hospital for
chronic diseases, it served almost from the start primarily as a refuge for
fatally ill, poor patients, who could spend the last months, weeks or days of
their life in relative comfort, with nursing and spiritual and medical care. This primary function was explicitly accepted by those in charge of
the hospital. It is evidenced by an extraordinarily high mortality of
almost 70 %, with almost two-thirds of the patients staying for less than 3
months and ÔconsumptionÕ being the foremost cause of death. In conclusion, the ÔHundertsuppeÕ
is discussed as an exemplary case of an institution for the dying which arose
due to the insufficient care for incurable and dying patients in the new ÔcurativeÕ
hospitals; the first English hospices in the late 19th century and the
influential St. ChristopherÕs Hospice in the 1960s, commonly attributed to
charismatic individual founding figures like Howard Barrett and Cicely
Saunders, are shown to have originated from similar contexts.
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