Kristen C. Howard
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Household and hospital
Negotiating social welfare and social discipline in Reformation Geneva
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Six months before Geneva’s ruling magistrates officially established the Reformation in the city, they unanimously voted to create the Hôpital Général (General Hospital) to orchestrate a new system of civic social welfare. The hospital’s records, which have been understudied compared to those of other Reformation-era Genevan institutions demonstrate the crucial place of the hospital in Genevan social, religious, and political life. Within these registers, we find the strategies enacted by poor families seeking assistance and the counterstrategies developed by the hospital’s directors in response. In their attempts to minimise aid to individuals but maximise the number of households they could assist, the directors created a ritual of poor relief in which civic officials, religious leaders, and the poor themselves all performed key roles. This chapter argues that the hospital, operating in conjunction with the Consistory and Small Council, functioned as a disciplinary institution focused on ensuring that each Genevan (man, woman, and child) engaged in labour and respected their religious obligations. The Genevan General Hospital thus provides an interesting case study allowing for the examination of the negotiation between individual and institution, household and hospital, to better understand how each player in social welfare (inter)acted in order to achieve their own goals.

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Do good unto all

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