- 6 x 9.
- 246pp.
- 1 B&W photograph, 2 maps.
- Hardcover
- 2005
- Available
- 978-0-472-11474-0
Add to Cart
- $94.95 U.S.
From Monastery to Hospital traces the origin of the late Roman hospital to the earliest groups of Christian monastics. Often characterized as holy men and miracle-workers who transformed late antique spirituality, monks held an equally significant impact on the development of medicine in Late Antiquity. Andrew Crislip illuminates the innovative approaches to health care within the earliest monasteries that provided the model for the greatest medical achievement of Late Antiquity: the hospital.
From Monastery to Hospital draws on some of the most vibrant areas of scholarship of the ancient world, including asceticism, the study of the body, history of the family, and the history of medicine. The book will be of interest to scholars and students of early Christianity, Roman History, the history of medicine, and Catholic, Coptic, and Eastern Orthodox history and theology. It will also be of interest to the broader field of history of Christianity, especially with its connections to charitable traditions in the church through the modern period.
"In this book Crislip examines the way in which monasteries came to fill the particular 'social gap' of health care, provided within the family. This book provides a useful, exhaustively referenced survey of late antique monastic health care."
—Ecclesiastical History
Copyright © 2005, University of Michigan. All rights reserved.