Lazarettos throughout historyThe first lazaret was established by Venice in 1403 on Santa Maria di Nazareth (also called "Nazaretum" or "Lazaretum", today "Lazzaretto Vecchio"), an island in the Venetian Lagoon .[2][3][4] Additionally there is Lazzaretto Nuovo, also in the lagoon. Pope Clement XII erected a Lazaretto at the south end of the Ancona harbor. Fidra[5] an uninhabited island in the Firth of Forth, off eastern Scotland has the ruins of an old chapel, or lazaretto for the sick, which was dedicated to on it St. Nicholas.[5] Lazaretto Island, (formerly known as Aghios Dimitrios) located two nautical miles northeast of Corfu . The island has an area of 17.5 acres and is administered by the Greek National Tourist Organization. During World War II, the Axis Occupation of Greece established a concentration camp there for the prisoners of the Greek National Resistance movement. There remains today the two-storied building that served as the Headquarters of the Italian army, a small church, and the wall against which those condemned to death were shot. [6][7]
Lazaretto Islet survives on Ithaca and another on Zakynthos. As of 2002, one of the few remaining lazarets in Europe is the one in Dubrovnik.[8] In the United States, the Philadelphia Lazaretto was the first edifice of its kind in the country.[9] See also
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