Abstract

In this article, I examine the changing disposal of pauper corpses in the nineteenth-century hospitals of Brussels. I argue that the end of the century witnessed a growing focus on the individuality of the pauper corpse. Research into hospital records has revealed the significance of the ideological struggles between Catholics, liberals and socialists from the 1860s onwards, as a result of which the indifferent attitude of hospital administrators regarding dead patients and relatives was increasingly contested. Acts and complaints by the local authorities, mutualist burial societies and relatives brought about improvements in the material conditions of the pauper burial. My analysis of this debate shows that the ideological conflicts regarding Catholic and civil burials, as well as the introduction of new burial standards within hospitals, led to a greater emphasis on the burial desires of the dead. Yet, I argue that this attention towards the individual pauper corpse was only deemed necessary if close family members or burial societies stood up for the fulfilment of the dying wishes of the dead. Poor hospital patients without such social relationships could not prevent an anonymous anatomy burial.

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