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Articles

Beggars, Vagrants and Romanies : Repression and Persecution in Portuguese Society (14th–18th Centuries)

by Sandra Alvarez
February 7, 2011

Beggars, Vagrants and Romanies : Repression and Persecution in Portuguese Society (14th–18th Centuries)

Abreu, Laurinda

Hygiea Internationalis : An Interdisciplinary Journal for the History of Public Health (2007)

Abstract

In the Europe that witnessed the construction of the Early Modern States, those who did not have an occupation and refused to work were stigmatized, severely persecuted, marginalized and expelled from the communities. What I propose in this paper is to go back to the first regulations against vagrancy and idleness in Portugal. With no substantial differences to the other European States’ diplomas promulgated at the same time, the Portuguese laws against the false beggars, the vagabonds and Roma have some particularities: they maintain the medieval matrix (1375), represent the thought of the central government and were conceived to be applied at a national scale. And, above all, they were also responsible for the conceptualization of “deserving poor”, keeping those groups away from the institutionalized poor relief and health care, especially the ones given by the hospitals.

Click here to read this article from An Interdisciplinary Journal for the History of Public Health

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TagsCrime in the Middle Ages • Daily Life in the Middle Ages • Early Modern Period • Gypsies • Healthcare in the Middle Ages • Later Middle Ages • Medieval Law • Medieval Politics • Medieval Portugal • Medieval Social History

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