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・ Lazare Kopelmanas
・ Lazare Lévy
・ Lazare Meerson
・ Lazare Picault
・ Lazare Ponticelli
・ Lazare Saminsky
・ Lazare Sèhouéto
・ Lazarenko
・ Lazarenkoa
・ Lazaret (Sibiu district)
・ Lazaret, Niger
・ Lazareto (disambiguation)
・ Lazareto (Ithaca)
・ Lazaretta
・ Lazarette
Lazaretto
・ Lazaretto (album)
・ Lazaretto (song)
・ Lazaretto Cairn Lighthouse
・ Lazaretto Creek
・ Lazaretto Island
・ Lazaretto Point Light
・ Lazarev
・ Lazarev Bay
・ Lazarev Ice Shelf
・ Lazarev Institute of Oriental Languages
・ Lazarev Mountains
・ Lazarev Sea
・ Lazarev Trough
・ Lazarev, Russia


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Lazaretto : ウィキペディア英語版
Lazaretto

A lazaretto or lazaret (from (イタリア語:lazzaretto) (:laddzaˈretto)) is a quarantine station for maritime travellers. Lazarets can be ships permanently at anchor, isolated islands, or mainland buildings. Until 1929, some lazarets were also used for disinfecting postal items, usually by fumigation. A leper colony administered by a Christian religious order was often called a lazar house, after the parable of Lazarus the beggar.
== Lazarettos throughout history ==

In 1592, a lazaretto made of wooden huts was built on Manoel Island in Malta after an outbreak of the plague. It was pulled down in 1593, since the disease had subsided. In 1643, Grandmaster Lascaris built a permanent Lazzaretto in the same place to control the periodic influx of plague and cholera on board visiting ships. The hospital was subsequently improved over time, and was enlarged during the governorship of Sir Henry Bouverie in 1837 and 1838. The hospital was closed in 1929 and building still exists to this day.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://lc.gov.mt/Page.aspx?catid=33&pid=235&lid=1 )〕 There are plans for the restoration of the Manoel Island Lazaretto.
Africans imported to Savannah, Georgia during the days of the slavery typically had to wait at a quarantine station on Tybee Island, which the slave ships accessed by way of Lazaretto Creek.
Lazaretto Island (formerly known as Aghios Dimitrios) is located two nautical miles north-east of Corfu (). In the early 16th century, when Corfu was under Venetian rule, a monastery was established on the islet for prevention of diseases. Later that century, the island was renamed Lazaretto, after the leprosarium that was set up there. In 1798, when the French ruled Corfu, the Russo-Turkish fleet took over the islet and ran it as a military hospital. In 1814, during the British occupation, the leprosarium was renovated and went into operation again. After the Ionian Islands were united with Greece (1864), the leprosarium only operated when needed.
Lazaretto Islet survives on Ithaca and another on Zakynthos.
According to Edward Hasted in 1798, two large hospital ships (also called lazarettos), (which were the surviving hulks of forty-four gun ships) were moored in Halstow Creek in Kent. The creek is an inlet from the River Medway and the River Thames. The hospital ships watched over ships coming to England which were forced to stay in the creek under quarantine to protect the country from infectious diseases, including the plague.
Fidra, an uninhabited island in the Firth of Forth in eastern Scotland, has the ruins of an old chapel, dedicated to St. Nicholas, which was used as a lazaretto.〔(British History Online )〕
During the Nazi occupation of Poland, the German-run Treblinka extermination camp had a pit where new arrivals who were severely ill would be shot; the staff's euphemistic name for this area was the lazaret.
As of 2002, one of the few remaining lazarets in Europe is the one in Dubrovnik.
In the United States, the Philadelphia Lazaretto was built in 1799 as a response to the 1793 yellow fever outbreak.〔(Lazaretto outside of Philadelphia )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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