Lucy Barnhouse
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Good people, poor sick
The social identities of lepers in the late medieval Rhineland
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This chapter, focusing on leprosy in the late medieval Rhineland, aims to illuminate the diverse social realities of those viewed as lepers in medieval Europe. It argues that leprosy did not erase previous social identities, as has sometimes been claimed. Rather, medieval lepers derived their identity from where they lived, and the communities of which they were a part. In addition to examining leper hospitals it considers informal communities of lepers, often located near crossroads. The distinctive vocabulary applied to such communities sheds light on how they lived and were perceived. Overall, the vocabulary used for lepers reveals not only a variety of responses, but a variety of ways in which those designated as lepers could choose to live.

The sources include charters preserved in the archives of Mainz and Darmstadt and the internal records of the leper hospitals of Mainz, Worms and Speyer. A comparison of the statutes of leprosaria and multi-purpose hospitals in the Rhineland indicates that such regulations were primarily affected by hospitals’ legal status as religious institutions, rather than by attitudes towards lepers. The chapter also examines the fifteenth-century letters of diagnosis created by the physicians responsible for the examination for leprosy. These letters reveal both the individual and the collective agency of lepers. The lepers of the Rhineland appear not only in groups, but as individuals: seeking or disputing medical diagnosis, receiving gifts or care, and actively participating in late medieval communities.

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Leprosy and identity in the Middle Ages

From England to the Mediterranean

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